
The effects of repeated, intermittent administration of a moderate dose of  ethanol (3.4 g/kg/day × 6 days, intragastrically via gavages) on cognitive  function were examined in male Wistar rats.
No significant differences in weight  gain between the ethanol- and water-treated rats were found.
Analysis of  physical dependence revealed no signs of spontaneous withdrawal, whereas  withdrawal signs exacerbated by Ro15-4513, an inverse benzodiazepine agonist,  were apparent 5 hours but not 24 hours after the cessation of ethanol treatment.
Spatial learning and memory, as assessed in the Barnes maze, were impaired 3–6  days following the treatment but recovered by the 11th–14th days. Reversal  learning, however, was impaired throughout the 2-week observation period.
Thus,  bouts of moderate-dose ethanol administration transiently impair spatial  learning and memory, and promote cognitive inflexibility.
The employed ethanol exposure paradigm may provide a model of human cognitive deficits associated with alcohol binge drinking.