Frontiers in Psychiatry (Sep 2024)

Decreased consumption of natural rewards in rhesus monkeys with prolonged methamphetamine abstinence

  • Jiahui Zhou,
  • Hang Su,
  • Chengjie Tang,
  • Xiaotian Wu,
  • Zijing Wang,
  • Wenlei Zhang,
  • Rongwei Zhai,
  • Haifeng Jiang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2024.1446353
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15

Abstract

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RationaleRelapse to drug use is a major clinical challenge in the treatment of addictive disorders, including psychostimulant use and may be exacerbated by reduced sensitivity to natural, non-drug reward. Given the relatively limited set of outcomes, and short withdrawal time in rodent studies, we conducted a more detailed assessment of the response to natural rewards in methamphetamine (METH) naive versus exposed monkeys during long-term abstinence.MethodsThis study introduced an improved sucrose preference test (iSPT) to assess natural reward seeking and consumption in monkeys with long-term abstinence after methamphetamine (METH) use. The test was administered to sixteen naive monkeys and five METH exposed monkeys that had been abstinent for at least 3 months.ResultsMETH exposed monkeys showed a lower sucrose preference score in both the iSPT (z = -2.10, p = 0.036) and the sucrose preference test (z = -2.61, p = 0.009). The sucrose preference score was significantly correlated with the latency of the establishment of stable sucrose-preference (r = -0.76, df = 46, p < 0.001) but not with the other variables. Furthermore, water-sucrose switch latency and switch times were significantly negatively correlated (r = -0.50, df = 20, p = 0.02).ConclusionThese results show reductions in natural reward consumption during long-term methamphetamine abstinence.

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