Journal article

Anterior insular cortex is critical for the propensity to relapse following punishment-imposed abstinence of alcohol seeking

EJ Campbell, JPM Flanagan, LC Walker, MKRI Hill, NJ Marchant, AJ Lawrence

Journal of Neuroscience | Published : 2019

Abstract

Humans with alcohol use disorder typically abstain because of the negative consequences associated with excessive drinking, and exposure to contexts previously associated with alcohol use can trigger relapse. We used a rat model that captures a characteristic of this human condition: namely voluntary abstinence from alcohol use because of contingent punishment. There is substantial variability in the propensity to relapse following extended periods of abstinence, and this is a critical feature preventing the successful treatment of alcohol use disorder. Here we examined relapse following acute or prolonged abstinence. In male alcohol preferring P rats, we found an increased propensity to rel..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by National Health and Medical Research Council


Funding Acknowledgements

This work was supported by a National Health and Medical Research Council Project Grant (1105741); A.J.L. is a NHMRC Principal Fellow (1116930) and E.J.C. is supported by the University of Melbourne Early Career Researcher Grant Scheme; and we acknowledge the Victorian State Government Operational Infrastructure Scheme. We thank Lauren McKeogh, Pascale Maynard, Shubham Ranjan, Shubo Jin, and Liubov Lee-Kardashyan for their help with behavioral and Fos experiments and Christina Perry for thoughtful discussions.