FACTORS CONTRIBUTING TO THE ESCALATION OF ALCOHOL CONSUMPTION
Autor: | Dawn E. Muskiewicz, F. Scott Hall, Olivier George, Michael T. Bowen |
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Jazyk: | angličtina |
Rok vydání: | 2021 |
Předmět: |
Alcohol Drinking
social isolation Cognitive Neuroscience alcohol dependence alcohol deprivation effect Alcohol use disorder Underage Drinking alcohol use disorder incubation of craving Cardiovascular Behavioral Science & Comparative Psychology Social drinking Medical and Health Sciences Article Behavioral Neuroscience Substance Misuse Alcohol Use and Health continuous ethanol access Environmental health alcohol withdrawal Medicine Animals Social isolation intermittent ethanol access Cancer Consumption (economics) Pediatric alcoholism Ethanol business.industry alcohol Alcohol dependence Social anxiety Psychology and Cognitive Sciences drinking in the dark medicine.disease Brain Disorders Stroke Alcoholism Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology Drinking in the dark Good Health and Well Being sucrose fading medicine.symptom social anxiety business Alcohol consumption alcoholic |
Zdroj: | Neurosci Biobehav Rev |
Popis: | Understanding factors that contribute to the escalation of alcohol consumption are key to understanding how an individual transitions from non/social drinking to AUD and to providing better treatment. In this review, we discuss how the way ethanol is consumed as well as individual and environmental factors contribute to the escalation of ethanol consumption from intermittent low levels to consistently high levels. Moreover, we discuss how these factors are modelled in animals. It is clear a vast array of complex, interacting factors influence escalation of alcohol consumption. Some of these factors act early in the acquisition of ethanol consumption and initial escalation, while others contribute to escalation of ethanol consumption at a later stage and are involved in the development of alcohol dependence. It is apparent from our review that much of the literature examines factors contributing to the acquisition of ethanol consumption and on initial escalation from low levels to pharmacologically relevant levels of consumption. Some models capture escalation associated with the formation of dependence; however, neurobiological studies in these models usually focus on comparisons between the AUD model animals and alcohol naïve animals (or animals from other models), making it difficult to distinguish factors associated with the escalation of interest from those associated with consumption in the model per se. There is thus considerable need for more studies examining escalation associated with the formation of dependence as it is of considerable relevance to understanding and treating AUD. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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