F. Gonzalezlima et al., FUNCTIONAL MAPPING OF THE RAT-BRAIN DURING DRINKING BEHAVIOR - A FLUORODEOXYGLUCOSE STUDY, Physiology & behavior, 54(3), 1993, pp. 605-612
Autoradiographic techniques using the radiolabeled glucose analog [C-1
4]2-fluoro-2-deoxy-D-glucose (FDG) were used to map the functional act
ivity in the CNS during drinking behavior. Rats were trained to drink
water during a 1-h session each day. Half of the rats were injected wi
th FDG and allowed to drink, while the other half were satiated prior
to FDG injection. Uptake of FDG for drinking and control groups of rat
s was quantified in 60 brain structures from frontal cortex to cervica
l spinal cord. The largest percent increase in activity (96%) during d
rinking was in the lateral hypothalamus. Limbic structures with signif
icant metabolic increases included the lateral septum (48%), lateral h
abenula (44%), and nucleus accumbens (32%). Thalamic nuclei activated
included intralaminar (60%), zona incerta (51%), ventroposteromedial (
50%), anterior ventral (47%), and dorsal medial (40%). Other structure
s with increases were the caudal caudate nucleus (53%) and the spinal
trigeminal nucleus (45%). The findings were interpreted in light of re
lated metabolic mapping studies of the effects of orofacial stimulatio
n, dehydration, ingestion, arousal, and reward. It was concluded that
this FDG study revealed primarily the involvement of structures linked
to rewarding and arousal components of motivated drinking behavior, a
s well as sensorimotor correlates of the orofacial stimulation. The fi
ndings provide the first comprehensive functional map of brain systems
related to drinking behavior in adult animals.