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Animal model that mimics emotional bummer of cocaine addiction developed

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Animal model that mimics emotional bummer of cocaine addiction developed

People addicted to cocaine often suffer a downward emotional spiral that is a key to their craving and chronic relapse. Now, a team of researchers has developed an animal model that mimics the negative affect of the drug dependence.

Washington, Mar 13 : People addicted to cocaine often suffer a downward emotional spiral that is a key to their craving and chronic relapse. Now, a team of researchers has developed an animal model that mimics the negative affect of the drug dependence.

The scientists said that their animal model could enable better understanding of the emotional motivations of cocaine addiction and how to ameliorate them.

The researchers started with the well-known phenomenon that rats will tend to avoid a taste that is paired with self-administration of a drug such as cocaine. Also, it was known that the greater avoidance of the taste was associated with greater drug self-administration.

In their experiments, the researchers squirted a grape- or orange-flavored sweet solution into the mouths of rats. After squirting one flavor, the rats were given a chance to press a lever to obtain cocaine; after the other taste, pressing the lever delivered only a saline solution.

The researchers measured the rats' response to the flavors by analyzing video of their expressions and measuring the electrical activity of a muscle involved in the licking response.

They found that the rats developed an aversion to the normally enjoyable taste that was associated with cocaine, compared to the saline-associated taste. They also found that the greater the measured aversion, the quicker and more frequently the rats pressed the lever to obtain cocaine.

The researchers also found that the aversive taste excited activity in a brain region called the nucleus accumbens, which is associated with expression of motivated behaviors.

The researchers wrote that their findings demonstrated that it is possible to induce a "negative affective state" in the animals that predicts the motivation to take cocaine.

They said that their finding "also is provocative because it bridges two well-known drug-abuse phenomena. The first, that drug-associated cues elicit drug seeking, has been well documented in humans and animal models. The second, that negative affect drives drug seeking, has been well described by human addicts but is difficult to model in animals."

"The importance of this study lies in this animal model's potential to define and then ameliorate the motivational properties of negative affect evoked by drug-associated stimuli and thereby decrease the drive for the drug," they wrote.

The study is published in the journal Neuron, published by Cell Press.

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