Adolescent oral oxycodone self-administration disrupts neurobehavioral and neurocognitive development

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Abstract

Nonmedical use of prescription opioids peaks during late adolescence, a developmental period associated with the maturation of higher-order cognitive processes. To date, however, how chronic adolescent oxycodone (OXY) self-administration alters neurobehavioral (i.e., locomotion, startle reactivity) and/or neurocognitive (i.e., preattentive processes, intrasession habituation, stimulus-reinforcement learning, sustained attention) function has not yet been systematically evaluated. Hence, the rationale was built for establishing the dose-dependency of adolescent OXY self-administration on the trajectory of neurobehavioral and neurocognitive development. From postnatal day (PD) 35 to PD 105, an age in rats that corresponds to the adolescent and young adult period in humans, male and female F344/N rats received access to either oral OXY (0, 2, 5, or 10 mg/kg) or water under a two-bottle choice experimental paradigm. Independent of biological sex or dose, rodents voluntarily escalated their OXY intake across ten weeks. A longitudinal experimental design revealed prominent OXY-induced impairments in neurobehavioral development, characterized by dose-dependent increases in locomotion and sex-dependent increases in startle reactivity. Systematic manipulation of the interstimulus interval in prepulse inhibition supports an OXY-induced impairment in preattentive processes. Despite the long-term cessation of OXY intake, rodents with a history of chronic adolescent oral OXY self-administration exhibited deficits in sustained attention; albeit no alterations in stimulus-reinforcement learning were observed. Taken together, adolescent oral OXY self-administration induces selective long-term alterations in neurobehavioral and neurocognitive development enjoining the implementation of safer prescribing guidelines for this population.

Original languageEnglish
Article number110064
JournalNeuropharmacology
Volume258
DOIs
StatePublished - Nov 1 2024

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 Elsevier Ltd

Funding

This work was supported in part by grants from NIH (National Institute on Drug Abuse, DA013137; National Institute on Drug Abuse, DA056288; National Institute on Drug Abuse, DA059310) and by the Center of Biomedical Research Excellence (COBRE) in Pharmaceutical Research and Innovation (CPRI, NIH P20-GM130456). This work was supported in part by grants from NIH (National Institute on Drug Abuse; National Institute on Drug Abuse, DA056288; National Institute on Drug Abuse, DA059310; National Institute of General Medical Sciences, GM109091) and by the Center of Biomedical Research Excellence (COBRE) in Pharmaceutical Research and Innovation (CPRI, NIH P20-GM130456).

FundersFunder number
National Institutes of Health (NIH)
National Institute on Drug AbuseDA059310, DA013137, DA056288
Center of Biomedical Research ExcellenceP20-GM130456
National Institute of General Medical Sciences DP2GM119177 Sophie Dumont National Institute of General Medical SciencesGM109091

    Keywords

    • Development
    • Opioid use disorder
    • Preattentive processes
    • Prepulse inhibition
    • Sustained attention

    ASJC Scopus subject areas

    • Pharmacology
    • Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience

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