The Relationship Between Physical Activity and Cocaine Intake in Mice

Click name to view affiliation

Anthony Ferreira Robert Debré Hospital, INSERM U676, Paris

Search for other papers by Anthony Ferreira in
Current site
Google Scholar
PubMed
Close
,
Fernando Perez-Diaz Robert Debré Hospital, INSERM U676, Paris

Search for other papers by Fernando Perez-Diaz in
Current site
Google Scholar
PubMed
Close
, and
Charles Cohen-Salmon Robert Debré Hospital, INSERM U676, Paris

Search for other papers by Charles Cohen-Salmon in
Current site
Google Scholar
PubMed
Close
Restricted access

Human studies suggest the existence of an exercise dependency syndrome and a link between drug intake and intense physical activity. Our aim was to assess whether a link actually existed between running activity and cocaine intake in mice. Thirty male Swiss mice were used. Ten mice were used as controls, individually housed in cages without a wheel, and 20 mice were in cages with free access to a running wheel. Cocaine preference was estimated as the ratio (as percent) of cocaine solution intake over total fuid intake in the course of free oral access to cocaine solution versus water. High cocaine scores were only found with high wheel activity. The lowest activity scores were found with low cocaine preference. A group of “high runners” impervious to cocaine appetence and to the effects of exercise withdrawal were found, which may suggest that shared mechanisms could be involved in both dependence on sport and drug taking. Findings suggest that moderate activity seems to be associated with low cocaine preference, and cocaine intake could increase in cases of intense activity. The urge for physical activity (as seen with top-level professional athletes) may theoretically combine with different degrees of vulnerability to cocaine. The use of substances by those engaging in intense physical activity, for performance enhancement or recreational purposes, could potentially trigger a pattern of consumption and addiction. This pattern corresponds with the theory that there may be an addictive element in physical activity. Animal models could prove useful for identifying biological or behavioral predictors of such vulnerability and identifying persons either at risk or possessing resistance.

The authors are with INSERM U 676, Robert Debré Hospital, Paris, France.

  • Collapse
  • Expand
All Time Past Year Past 30 Days
Abstract Views 2688 310 28
Full Text Views 50 34 0
PDF Downloads 7 4 0