Abstract
Distress tolerance (DT), defined as the ability to persist in goal-directed behavior while experiencing psychological distress, is associated with greater frequency of substance use and poor treatment outcomes. To examine a potential causal role substance use may play in DT, we developed a rodent model of DT in which rats had to press a lever within a continuously decreasing time window for reward while receiving negative feedback on failure trials. DT was defined as the time rats continued to seek reward before quitting the task. We assessed the relationship of DT with cocaine seeking/taking by measuring DT before cocaine self-administration (SA), and after 1 week and 1 month of drug abstinence. We found that DT prior to cocaine SA did not predict cocaine seeking/taking, yet DT measured after 1 month abstinence significantly predicted subsequent high levels of early session cocaine taking. Additionally, high DT measured after abstinence protected against high cocaine seeking, but this protective effect was blocked in rats with high impulsivity. Finally, while a decrease in 1 month-abstinent DT was observed following SA across treatment conditions, among cocaine-exposed rats, greater cocaine SA correlated with a steeper decrease in DT. These results show that low DT after drug abstinence is associated with heightened levels of cocaine seeking and taking behavior and that impulsivity influences this effect. Collectively, these results support the validity of our rodent DT model while extending the human literature and set the foundation for future animal studies designed to determine neural mechanisms underlying DT.