Scott E Bowen

Scott E Bowen
Wayne State University | WSU · Department of Psychology

Ph.D.

About

80
Publications
8,606
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2,154
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Introduction
My current research focuses on behavioral pharmacology, behavioral toxicology, and neurobehavioral teratology. Research in my laboratory investigates the behavioral effects of abused drugs, particularly inhalants. My research is designed to understand why volatile organic solvents, such as toluene and nitrous oxide, are abused. I am also interested in the long term effects of repeated use of these volatile organic solvents.
Additional affiliations
January 2006 - December 2011
Wayne State University
January 1996 - December 1999
Virginia Commonwealth University
January 1993 - December 1997
University of Mississippi

Publications

Publications (80)
Article
The opioid epidemic has resulted in a drastic increase in gestational exposure to opioids. Opioid‐dependent pregnant women are typically prescribed medications for opioid use disorders (“MOUD”; e.g., buprenorphine [BUP]) to mitigate the harmful effects of abused opioids. However, the consequences of exposure to synthetic opioids, particularly BUP,...
Article
Environmental exposure to toxicants is a major health issue and a leading risk factor for premature mortality worldwide, including environmental exposures to volatile organic compounds (VOCs), specifically Benzene, Toluene, Ethylbenzene, and Xylene (BTEX). While exposure to these compounds individually has shown behavioral and neurochemical effects...
Article
Toluene is an aromatic hydrocarbon commonly abused by young adolescents for its central nervous system depressant effects. While toluene's pharmacological effects at high concentrations are relatively well known, few studies have assessed toluene's effects on lung and brain tissues. The present study characterized the pathological effects of acute...
Article
This paper reviews the scientific evidence generated in the last two decades on the effects and mechanisms of action of most commonly misused inhalants. In the first section, we define what inhalants are, how they are used, and their prevalence worldwide. The second section presents specific characteristics that define the main groups of inhalants:...
Article
Opioid Use Disorder (OUD) is a global epidemic also affecting women of reproductive age. A standard form of pharmacological treatment for OUD is Opioid Maintenance Therapy (OMT) and buprenorphine has emerged as the preferred treatment for pregnant women with OUD relative to methadone. However, the consequences of BUP exposure on the developing Mate...
Article
Full-text available
Combined environmental exposures to the volatile organic compounds (VOCs) Benzene, Toluene, Ethylbenzene, and Xylene (BTEX) pose clear risks to public health. Research into these risks is under-studied even as BTEX levels in the atmosphere are predicted to rise. This review focuses on the available literature using single- and combined-BTEX compone...
Article
Background Intentionally inhaling volatile organic solvent like toluene for its intoxicating effects continues to be a public health concern. While repeated abuse of toluene has deleterious behavioral and health effects, little is known about the actions of toluene on the dopaminergic neurotransmitter system within the central nervous system. Meth...
Poster
Full-text available
Significance: The opioid crisis has led to increases in pregnant opioid-dependent women treated with opioid-maintenance therapy (buprenorphine, BUP). However, not much is known about the consequences of gestational BUP exposure on pregnancy outcomes or fetal development. Previous work has not accounted for the critical fact that women are likely al...
Article
The intentional misuse of volatile solvents like toluene is a persistent public health concern. Limited clinical data suggest that chronic inhalant abusers may experience signs of withdrawal, including anxiety. Behavioral withdrawal from toluene has not been examined in a preclinical model. In the current study, young adult male Swiss Webster mice...
Article
The abuse of inhalants like toluene continues to be widespread around the world, especially among children and teenagers. Despite its frequency of misuse, the dynamics between dopamine (DA) and gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) in response to toluene exposure remains unclear. To further decipher toluene’s actions, we used a dynamic exposure system in...
Chapter
Inhalant misuse is among the most prevalent and pernicious forms of drug use in the United States. Hundreds of low-cost and widely available commercial products containing volatile hydrocarbons are inhaled for their psychoactive effects. Inhalant use is prevalent among adolescents, indigenous populations, persons involved with the juvenile and crim...
Article
Full-text available
Inhalant abuse is a globally prevalent health issue with particular concerns about substance-abusing pregnant women. In both animal models and clinical case reports of toluene exposure, the primary physiological outcome measure of prenatal inhalant exposure is low birth weight (BW). However, the effect of prenatal toluene exposure on animal BW vari...
Article
Full-text available
Background and purpose: To investigate if cranial X-irradiation reduces amyloid-β (Aβ) plaques and influences cognitive function in a transgenic mouse model of AD. Methods and materials: B6.Cg-Tg (APPswePSEN1dE9)85Dbo/J AD-prone mice were given cranial X-irradiation. The number of Aβ plaques, along with expression of AD specific genes (84 genes:...
Article
Full-text available
Volatile organic solvent abuse continues to be a worldwide health problem, including the neurobehavioral teratogenic sequelae of toluene abuse during pregnancy. Although abuse levels of prenatal toluene exposure can lead to a Fetal Solvent Syndrome, there is little research examining these effects on memory. Consumption of toluene can have detrimen...
Article
Full-text available
Rationale: The abused inhalant toluene has potent behavioral effects, but only recently has progress been made in understanding the neurochemical actions that mediate the action of toluene in the brain. Available evidence suggests that toluene inhalation alters dopamine (DA) neurotransmission, but toluene's mechanism of action is unknown. Objecti...
Article
Full-text available
Activation of the dopaminergic mesolimbic reward circuit that originates in the ventral tegmental area (VTA) is postulated to preferentially suppress emotional responses to noxious stimuli, and presumably contributes to the addictive liability of strong analgesics. VTA dopamine neurons are activated via cholinergic afferents and microinjection of c...
Chapter
The misuse of inhalants is prevalent around the world. Individuals inhale vapors from a number of chemical substances to achieve a euphoric experience. Within just the United States, current estimates indicate that more than 22. million Americans aged 12 or more have abused an inhalant with approximately 750,000 using an inhalant for the first time...
Article
Full-text available
The continued abuse of inhaled organic solvents,especially among women of childbearing age, raises the risk of long-term behavioral effects of maternal toluene abuse. In this study, the effects of short-term exposures to high toluene concentrations (i.e., “binges”) were tested in independent groups of adolescent rats with different toluene treatmen...
Article
Toluene is a frequently abused solvent. Previous studies have suggested that toluene acts like other drugs of abuse, specifically on the dopaminergic system in the nucleus accumbens (NAc) and ventral tegmental area (VTA) of the mesolimbic pathway. Although changes in dopamine (DA) levels and c-Fos have been observed in both acute and repeated expos...
Article
Full-text available
Binge Toluene Exposure in Pregnancy and Pre-weaning Developmental Consequences in Rats. Bowen, S.E. and Hannigan, J.H. The persistent rate of abuse of inhaled organic solvents, especially among women of child-bearing age, raises the risk for teratogenic effects of maternal toluene abuse. In this study, timed-pregnant Sprague Dawley rats were expose...
Article
The abused inhalant toluene has potent behavioral effects, but only recently has progress been made in understanding the molecular pathways that mediate the action of toluene in the brain. Toluene and ethanol induce similar behavioral effects and share some targets including NMDA and GABA receptors. In studies examining neuronal actions of ethanol,...
Article
Full-text available
More than 22 million Americans age 12 and older have used inhalants, and every year more than 750,000 use inhalants for the first time. Despite the substantial prevalence and serious toxicities of inhalant use, it has been termed "the forgotten epidemic." Inhalant abuse remains the least-studied form of substance abuse, although research on its epi...
Article
Full-text available
Volatile substance misuse is a prevalent and often overlooked behavior among adolescents, including reported use among young pregnant women. Several medical repercussions can arise from the improper use of volatile substances, yet they are often underappreciated among scientists and health professionals. This brief review reports on the recent adva...
Article
Despite the high incidence of toluene abuse in adolescents, little is known regarding the effect of binge exposure on neurochemical profiles during this developmental stage. In the current study, the effects of binge toluene exposure during adolescence on neurotransmitter levels were determined using high-resolution proton magnetic resonance spectr...
Article
Inhalant abuse is a world-wide public health concern among adolescents. Most preclinical studies have assessed inhalant effects in adult animals leaving unclear how behavioral effects differ in younger animals. We exposed adolescent (postnatal day [PN] 28) and adult (PN90) male rats to toluene using 1 of 3 exposure patterns. These patterns modeled...
Article
Toluene is an organic solvent that is widely used by industry and is ubiquitous in our environment. As a result, exposure to solvents like toluene in work-related settings (i.e., relatively constant, low-level exposures) or through inhalant abuse (i.e., relatively intermittent, high-level exposures) is increasing for many women of reproductive age....
Article
The mechanisms by which abused inhalants exert their neurobehavioral effects are only partially understood. In research with other drugs of abuse, specific inbred mouse strains have been useful in exploring genetic loci important to variation in behavioral reactions to these drugs. In the present investigation, mice from three inbred strains (Balb/...
Article
Inhalant abuse in young people is a growing public health concern. We reported previously that acute toluene intoxication in young rats, using a pattern of exposures that approximate abuse patterns of inhalant use in humans, significantly altered neurochemical measures in select brain regions. In this study, adolescent and young adult rats were exp...
Article
Toluene is a commonly abused organic solvent. Inhalant abusers are increasingly women in their prime childbearing years. Children born to mothers who abused solvents during pregnancy may exhibit characteristics of a "fetal solvent syndrome" which may include dysmorphic features. This study examined the teratological effects of an abuse pattern of b...
Article
Full-text available
Abused solvents have effects similar to those of abused depressant drugs. This experiment evaluated the time course of the discriminative stimulus effects of toluene and 1,1,1-trichloroethane (TRI). Mice were trained to discriminate between i.p. injections of ethanol (EtOH; 1.25 g/kg) and saline in a two-lever operant task in which responding was u...
Article
Toluene abuse during pregnancy is a world-wide public health concern although the neurobehavioral teratogenic effects of toluene at the high concentrations and binge-like exposure patterns typical of abuse remain understudied. We assessed the effects of binge prenatal toluene exposure on behavior reflective of impulsivity in rat offspring using a "...
Article
Inhaling solvents for recreational purposes continues to be a world-wide public health concern. Toluene, a volatile solvent in many abused products, adversely affects the central nervous system. However, the long-term neurobehavioral effects of exposure to high-concentration, binge patterns typical of toluene abuse remain understudied. We studied t...
Article
Inhalant abuse during pregnancy lowers birth weight and impedes early development. These studies explored the effects of brief, repeated, prenatal toluene exposures in pregnant female rats on body weight, metabolic rate, body composition, and food intake in their offspring. Rats were exposed to 0, 8000, 12,000, or 16,000 ppm of toluene twice daily...
Article
Volatile organic solvent (inhalant) abuse continues to be a major health concern throughout the world. Of particular concern is the abuse of inhalants by adolescents because of its toxicity and link to illicit drug use. Toluene, which is found in many products such as glues and household cleaners, is among the most commonly abused organic solvents....
Article
Inhalation of organic solvents is a persistent form of drug abuse with particular concern being the abuse of inhalants by women of child-bearing age. While studies have begun assessing postnatal outcomes of offspring exposed prenatally to inhalants, relatively little is known about the distribution of toluene in blood and body tissues of pregnant,...
Article
Little is known about the neurochemical effects accompanying the high-concentration inhalant exposures characteristic of binge solvent abuse. In adult animals, prior studies with other patterns of exposure indicate that toluene, a commonly abused household and industrial solvent, has significant effects on the glutamatergic and GABAergic neurotrans...
Article
Gestational Toluene Exposure Effects on Spontaneous and Amphetamine-Induced Locomotor Behavior in Rats. Bowen, S.E., Mohammadi, M.H., Batis, J.C., and Hannigan, J.H. Neurotoxicology and Teratology, XX, 2006. The abuse of volatile organic solvents (inhalants) continues to be a major health concern throughout the world. Toluene, which is found in man...
Article
The abuse of volatile organic solvents (inhalants) leads to diverse sequelae at levels ranging from the cell to the whole organism. This paper reviews findings from the last 10 years of animal models investigating the behavioral and mechanistic effects of solvent abuse. In research with animal models of inhalant abuse, NMDA, GABA(A), glycine, nicot...
Article
Toluene, an abused solvent, shares behavioral and pharmacological effects with abused depressant drugs. These effects include ethanol- and pentobarbital-like discriminative stimulus effects. There is also emerging evidence that this abused inhalant may share stimulus effects with abused central nervous system (CNS) stimulants. To further explore th...
Article
1,1,1-Trichloroethane (TCE), a representative abused solvent, has well described acute behavioral effects in animals. Much less is known about repeated high-concentration exposures as would be encountered in inhalant abusers. Tolerance has been demonstrated in some, but not all, studies with TCE while sensitization has also been seen with other abu...
Article
Full-text available
Organic solvents have become ubiquitous in our environment and are essential for industry. Many women of reproductive age are increasingly exposed to solvents such as toluene in occupational settings (ie, long-term, low-concentration exposures) or through inhalant abuse (eg, episodic, binge exposures to high concentrations). The risk for teratogeni...
Article
Inhalant abuse in the United States trails only alcohol, marijuana and nicotine abuse. Toluene, found in glues and cleaners, is among the most commonly abused inhalants. While teratogenicity due to occupational exposure to organic solvents (i.e., relatively long-term exposure to lower concentrations) has been studied, the teratogenic potential of o...
Article
Abusers of inhaled solvents may show impaired cognitive functioning as reflected in problems with short-term memory and attention. In the present study, we examined the effects of the abused solvents toluene, m-xylene and 1,1,1-trichloroethane in an acoustic startle paradigm which included tests for pre-pulse inhibition (PPI). This procedure has be...
Article
Full-text available
Despite the central nervous system (CNS) being a target of virtually all solvents, few solvents have been thoroughly studied for their effects on unlearned animal behaviors. Of the solvents that have been studied, little is known about the relationship of exposure concentration to behavioral effect, and quantitative data relating the toxicologicall...
Article
Several benzodiazepines (BZs) have been shown to increase the peak force of operant responses at doses that increased, decreased, or had no effect on response rate, suggesting that operant response force may be a sensitive index of BZs' effects rather than solely a correlate of rate-dependent effects. In addition, contingent tolerance to the rate-d...
Article
Previous research conducted in this and other laboratories has examined the role of genetic factors in determining sensitivity to (-)-nicotine in a variety of behavioral and physiological measures in the rat. More recent research further indicates that genetic factors can also influence the level of sensitivity to (-)-nicotine when serving as a dis...
Article
Inhalant abuse has existed for a considerable period of time and it is currently one of the most prevalent drug abuse problems in the world. One repercussion from using these compounds is that abuse may result in lethality. In an attempt to better understand the deaths associated with inhalant abuse, the authors surveyed the death records from the...
Article
Full-text available
It has been shown that abused solvents, such as 1,1,1-trichloroethane (TCE) and toluene, share certain pharmacological properties with central nervous system depressants, such as alcohol and anesthetic vapors. Several vapors were tested for diazepam (DZ)- and phencyclidine (PCP)-like discriminative stimulus effects to further explore their pharmaco...
Article
Drug administration during test trials can increase the expression of place conditioning, offering an opportunity to determine the specificity of this enhanced response. Prior to training, Swiss-Webster mice spent similar durations in each of the distinctive compartments of a two-compartment box during three 900-s tests. During a 4-day conditioning...
Article
It has been shown that abused solvents, such as 1,1,1 -trichloroethane (TCE) and toluene, share certain pharmacological properties with central nervous system depressants, such as alcohol and anesthetic vapors. Several vapors were tested for diazepam (DZ)- and phencyclidine (PCP)-like discriminative stimulus effects to further explore their pharmac...
Article
Very little is known qualitatively or quantitatively about the acute central nervous system effects of isoparaffin solvents that are widely used in household and commercial applications. Four isoparaffinic hydrocarbon solvent products differing in predominant carbon number and volatility (ISOPAR-C, -E -G, -H) were tested for their acute effects on...
Article
Full-text available
Increases in rates of rodent behavior have been commonly seen with exposure to abused vapors. In the 1st study, 30-min exposures to vapors of toluene, trichloroethane (TCE), or methoxyflurane produced increases in locomotor activity of mice at lower concentrations and decreases at higher concentrations. In the 2nd study, the effects of these vapors...
Conference Paper
Increases in rates of rodent behavior have been commonly seen with exposure to abused vapors. In the Ist study, 30-min exposures to vapors of toluene, trichloroethane (TCE), or methoxyflurane produced increases in locomotor activity of mice at lower concentrations and decreases at higher concentrations. In the 2nd study, the effects of these vapors...
Article
A novel adjusting procedure was employed to assess the acute behavioral effects of inhaled 1,1,1-trichloroethane (TCE) and m-xylene. Mice were trained to lever press under a fixed ratio 20 schedule of milk reinforcement. During 30-min test sessions, TCE concentrations were altered every 5 min dependent upon rates of responding in the preceding 5-mi...
Article
We hypothesized that the abuse potential of certain types of inhalants could be evaluated in animals by determining the overlap in their profile of behavioral effects with that of CNS depressant drugs and other depressant-like abused inhalants. For our first attempt in evaluating a solvent with an unknown abuse potential we tested ISOPAR-E. ISOPAR-...
Article
The nitric oxide-arginine pathway is intimately connected to the release of dopamine and glutamate, two neurotransmitter systems that may be dysfunctional in schizophrenia. In addition, nitric oxide synthase inhibitors share several behavioral effects with the psychotomimetic drug, phencyclidine. Previous research has found that phencyclidine-like...
Article
In the present studies, drug discrimination procedures were used to compare the discriminative stimulus effects of ethanol (ETOH) and several volatile anesthetics. Male albino mice were trained to discriminate between IP injections of ETOH (1.25 g/kg) and saline in a two-lever operant task in which responding was under the control of a fixed-ratio...
Article
The acute neurobehavioral effects of three acetates (amyl, ethyl, and n-butyl acetate) were investigated after 20-min inhalation exposures in mice using locomotor activity and a functional observational battery (FOB). Ethyl and n-butyl acetate produced significant decreases in locomotor activity at the highest concentrations examined, while amyl ac...
Article
Previous research has shown that abused inhalants (i.e., the volatile solvents) share some of the pharmacological properties of drugs used in the treatment of anxiety. In an attempt to further examine commonalities in the effects of inhalants and central nervous system depressant drugs, the behavioral effects of inhaled 1,1,1-trichloroethane, tolue...
Article
Several recent reports have demonstrated that acute solvent exposure in animals produces a profile of neurobehavioral effects similar to that of classical CNS depressant drugs such as the barbiturates and ethanol. The present investigation further delineated the behavioral pharmacology of three solvents [1,1,1-trichloroethane (TCE), ether, and flur...
Article
To quantify the motoric effects of an abused solvent, photocells were added to two exposure systems. The first system utilized a static exposure chamber that recirculated vapor-laden air. A second dynamic system allowed for removal of waste gases with replenishment of fresh air combined with test vapors. In the present studies, male mice were exami...
Article
Haloperidol (0.1 mg/kg) and 5-min prewatering were given to 12 rats on three occasions each to determine effects on fixed ratio 15 (FR 15) responding for water. Compared to baseline, both treatments significantly reduced rate (prewatering slightly more) and both significantly increased duration. Though similar, drug and prewatering effects showed e...
Article
Tolerance to the suppressive effects of cocaine on milk drinking by rats was studied using a contingent tolerance experimental design. Three separate groups (n=6) of rats received 8.0, 16.0, or 32.0 mg/kg cocaine daily 15 min before a 15-min period of access to sweetened condensed milk for 20 days. Three additional groups of six rats each received...
Article
In order to investigate contingent tolerance to triazolam (TZ), 16 rats were trained with a water reinforcer to respond under a multiple fixed ratio 30 (FR 30)-differential reinforcement of low rate 20-s (DRL 20) schedule, during daily 20-min sessions. FR 30 and DRL 20 performances were assessed with measures of response rate, response duration, in...

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