RESUMO
Oral ingestion of a glucose solution following severe stress is a simple and effective way of preventing several of the negative sequelae of stress in rats. Similar resilience is obtained through hormetic training - pre-exposure to mild-to-moderate stress prior to severe stress. Here, we examined whether hormetic training is facilitated when a glucose solution is available following each hormetic training session. In Experiment 1, all rats were pre-exposed to a 30 min hormetic session of 25 inescapable tailshocks on each of 3 days. The schedule or hormesis differed between groups. The hormetic sessions occurred on either 3 consecutive days or with an interpolated day of rest between each hormetic session. Furthermore, in each of these conditions, one group had access to water and one group had access to a 40% glucose solution immediately after each hormetic session to complete a 2x2 factorial design. All groups were exposed to 100 inescapable tailshocks on the day following the end of hormetic training. Shuttle-escape testing occurred 24 h later. In Experiment 2, rats received two consecutive days of 100 inescapable tailshocks. Water or glucose was available following each session. Testing occurred 24 h after the second shock exposure. Experiment 1 replicated previous findings that rats exposed to hormetic training with interpolated rest did not show exaggerated fear responding or shuttle-escape deficits that normally result from 100 inescapable tailshocks, but training was ineffective if no rest was given between stress sessions. However, all post-stress glucose groups showed an elimination of helpless behavior. In Experiment 2, it was revealed that even 100 tailshocks can be made hormetic by post-stress glucose consumption.
Assuntos
Glucose , Desamparo Aprendido , Animais , Eletrochoque , Reação de Fuga , Hormese , Ratos , Estresse PsicológicoRESUMO
Hormesis is the process by which small stresses build resilience to large stresses. We pre-exposed rats to various parameters of mild-to-moderate stress prior to traumatic stress in the present experiments to assess the potential benefits of hormetic training on resilience to traumatic, uncontrollable stress. Rats underwent varying stress pre-training parameters prior to exposure to uncontrollable traumatic stress in the learned helplessness procedure. The ability to prevent the exaggerated fear responding and escape deficits that normally follow experience with traumatic stress were used as a measure of the benefits of hormetic training. Four experiments examined the effects of number of training sessions, stressor severity and pattern of rest between pre-training stress sessions. Repeated exposure to mild restraint stress or moderate shock stress eliminated both the enhanced fear conditioning and shuttle-escape deficits that result from exposure to traumatic, inescapable shock. The pattern of rest did not contribute to resilience when the pre-exposure stressor was mild, but was vital when the pre-exposure stressor was moderate, with an alternation of stress and rest being the most effective procedure. The data also suggest that the level of resilience may increase with the number of pre-exposure sessions.