酒精和焦虑:对进攻性和防御性侵略的影响。

D C Blanchard, R Veniegas, I Elloran, R J Blanchard
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引用次数: 19

摘要

在啮齿动物模型中,酒精对攻击性的影响不一致表明,这种影响是通过一些其他因素介导的,这些因素在各种测试中有不同的作用。酒精增强攻击性的模式表明,这可能在防御或焦虑行为减少攻击性的测试中最为明显。因此,理解酒精与攻击之间的关系也可能涉及酒精对焦虑的影响。啮齿动物焦虑的新动物实验模型包括对接近、接触捕食者或与(缺席)捕食者有关的情况的一系列防御行为的测量。恐惧/防御测试电池,测量前者,显示很少,不一致,对传统(苯二氮卓类)或非传统(5-HT1A激动剂)抗焦虑药的反应。然而,测量后者的焦虑/防御测试电池产生了传统和非传统抗焦虑药物一致的变化的“抗焦虑概况”,但非抗焦虑药物却没有。酒精(0.6和1.2 g/kg)改变了“抗焦虑特征”的四种行为,其方式与地西泮(2.0和4.0 mg/kg)的效果一致,表明它也是抗焦虑的。酒精和安定对焦虑的一致性作用为它们对攻击的相似作用提供了一种可能的机制。然而,非镇静剂量的酒精,而不是地西泮,会增加防御性攻击。尽管防御性攻击在行为和神经上都不同于进攻性攻击,但在对人类“攻击性”的分析中,两者并没有分开,这表明酒精对后者的影响也可能是由防御性攻击的变化所介导的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Alcohol and anxiety: effects on offensive and defensive aggression.

Inconsistencies in the effects of alcohol on aggression in rodent models suggest that this effect is mediated through some other factor that is differentially involved in the various tests. The patterning of alcohol enhancement of aggression suggests that this may be most apparent in tests in which defensiveness or anxiety act to reduce aggression. Thus, an understanding of the relationship between alcohol and aggression may also involve determination of alcohol effects on anxiety. New ethoexperimental models of anxiety in rodents involve the measurement of a range of defensive behaviors to approaching, contacting predators, or to situations associated with (absent) predators. A Fear/Defense Test Battery, measuring the former, showed little, and inconsistent, response to traditional (benzodiazepine) or nontraditional (5-HT1A agonist) anxiolytics. However, an Anxiety/Defense Test Battery, measuring the latter, produced an "anxiolytic profile" of changes seen consistently to both traditional and nontraditional anxiolytics, but not to nonanxiolytic drugs. Alcohol (0.6 and 1.2 g/kg) altered the four behaviors of the "anxiolytic profile" in a manner consistent with the effects of diazepam (2.0 and 4.0 mg/kg), indicating that it is also anxiolytic. The consistency of alcohol and diazepam effects on anxiety provide a possible mechanism for their somewhat similar effects on aggression. However, alcohol at nonsedative doses, but not diazepam, additionally enhances defensive attack. Although defensive attack is behaviorally and neurally different from offensive aggression, the two are not separated in analyses of human "aggression," suggesting that alcohol effects in the latter may also be mediated by changes in defensive attack.

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