Effects of lifelong ethanol consumption on cerebellar layer volumes in AA and ANA rats
- PMID: 9113269
Effects of lifelong ethanol consumption on cerebellar layer volumes in AA and ANA rats
Abstract
Aging and chronic alcohol consumption can cause degenerative changes in the cerebellar cortex. In this study, the effects of aging and lifelong alcohol consumption on cerebellar cortical layer volumes (molecular and granular) and also white matter layer volumes were studied in alcohol-preferring (AA) and nonpreferring (ANA) rats of both sexes. The ethanol-consuming animals (EtOH) had 12% (w/v) ethanol as the only available fluid from 4 to 22 months of age, whereas the young (3 month) and old controls (24 months) had only water to drink. The volumes of molecular, granular, and white matter layers of the cerebellar vermis in folia II, IV, VII, and X were measured by using systematic sampling and a point-counting method. The volumes of the granular and white matter layers showed consistent increase between 3 and 24 months of age, whereas the volume of the molecular layer remained unchanged with increasing age. Individual ethanol intake was measured over a 1-week period at the beginning and at the end of chronic ethanol exposure. Significant (ANOVA, p = 0.000) sex difference was found in the drinking behavior in both lines, with females consuming more alcohol than males (daily ethanol consumption at 22 months of age 3.2 +/- 0.3 vs. 7.1 +/- 0.3 g/kg for AA males and females; 3.2 +/- 0.3 vs. 5.4 +/- 0.4 g/kg for ANA males and females, respectively). The only ethanol-induced effect on the cerebellum was observed in ANA-EtOH females with a 15% reduction in the volumes of the molecular and granular layer in folium II compared with age-matched controls and a significant (p < 0.05, analysis of covariance with ethanol intake as a covariate) line difference in folium II (molecular and granular layers) was observed between ANA-EtOH females and AA-EtOH females. Furthermore, the volume of the molecular layer in folium II was significantly (p < 0.05, analysis of covariance with ethanol intake and body weights as covariates) reduced for ANA-EtOH females, compared with ANA-EtOH males indicating a sex difference in the cerebellar degeneration due to chronic alcohol consumption. Of the three layers studied, the white matter layer was the most resistant layer to the effects caused by chronic alcohol consumption. In view of the fact that AA and ANA rats of both sexes differ regarding the drinking behavior and ethanol metabolism, they provide an important model for further research on ethanol-induced pathological changes in the central nervous system.
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