Chocoholic mice fear no pain
08 Feb 2010
Ever get a buzz from eating chocolate? A study published in the open access journal BMC Neuroscience has shown that chocolate-craving mice are ready to tolerate electric shocks to get their fix.
Rossella Ventura worked with a team of researchers from the Santa Lucia Foundation, Rome, Italy, to study the links between stress and compulsive food-seeking. She said, “We used a new model of compulsive behavior to test whether a previous stressful experience of hunger might override a conditioned response to avoid a certain kind of food – in this case, chocolate”.
Ventura and her colleagues first trained well-fed mice and starved mice to seek chocolate in one chamber rather than going into an empty chamber. Then, they added a mild electric shock to the chamber containing the chocolate. Unsurprisingly, the well-fed animals avoided the sweet treat. However, mice that had previously been starved, before being allowed to eat their way back up their normal weight, resisted this conditioning – continuing to seek out chocolate despite the painful consequences. This is an index of compulsive behavior and the researchers claim that this matches compulsive food seeking in the face of negative consequences in humans.
Media Contact
Graeme Baldwin
Press Office, BioMed Central
Tel: +44 (0)20 3192 2165
Fax: +44 (0)20 3192 2010
Mob: +44 (0)7825 706422
Email: graeme.baldwin@biomedcentral.com
Notes to Editors
Food seeking in spite of harmful consequences is under prefrontal cortical noradrenergic control
Emanuele Claudio Latagliata, Enrico Patrono, Stefano Puglisi-Allegra and Rossella Ventura
BMC Neuroscience 2010 11:15 doi:10.1186/1471-2202-11-15
Article available at journal website: http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2202/11/15/
Please name the journal in any story you write. If you are writing for the web, please link to the article. All articles are available free of charge, according to BioMed Central’s open access policy.
BMC Neuroscience is an open access journal publishing original peer-reviewed research articles in all aspects of the nervous system, including molecular, cellular, developmental and animal model studies, as well as cognitive and behavioral research, and computational modeling. BMC Neuroscience (ISSN 1471-2202) is indexed/tracked/covered by PubMed, MEDLINE, BIOSIS, CAS, EMBASE, Scopus, PsycINFO, Thomson Reuters (ISI) and Google Scholar.
BioMed Central is an STM (Science, Technology and Medicine) publisher which has pioneered the open access publishing model. All peer-reviewed research articles published by BioMed Central are made immediately and freely accessible online, and are licensed to allow redistribution and reuse. BioMed Central is part of Springer Science+Business Media, a leading global publisher in the STM sector.

