Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0751295 (memory loss)
3,619 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

To investigate the behavioral consequences of benzodiazepines in subjects whose septo-hippocampal cholinergic (ACh) activity was impaired, C57BL/6 mice received an injection of 2.5 microg/0.2 microl of scopolamine into the medial septal area with an i.p. injection of 0.5 mg/kg of diazepam. The consequences of these treatments administered in combination or alone were evaluated on anxiety measured in an elevated plus-maze and on spontaneous alternation carried out in a T-maze, using two different intertrial intervals (ITI: 5s or 30s). In these conditions, only the combined treatment provoked a decrease of the anxiety level, which was associated with an impairment of spontaneous alternation restricted to the 5s ITI. Because mice were not impaired during the sequential 30s ITI, this seems to rule out the possibility that this alternation deficit resulted from a working memory loss. These results suggest an involvement of a septal ACh-GABA-A/BDZ interaction in the exaggeration of cognitive deficits produced by benzodiazepines in patients characterized by a cholinergic hypofunction.
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PMID:Modulation of spatial alternation and anxiety by septal scopolamine systemic diazepam in mice. 967 58

Rhesus monkeys with neonatal aspiration lesions of the hippocampal formation or the amygdaloid complex were tested on concurrent discrimination learning (24-hr intertrial interval [ITI]) at 3 months, on object recognition memory (delayed nonmatching-to-sample [DNMS]) at 10 months, and retested on both tasks at 6-7 years of age. Neonatal amygdaloid damage mildly impaired acquisition at the 24-hr ITI and the performance test of DNMS at both ages. In contrast, early hippocampal lesions impaired performance only on the longest lists of 10 items in DNMS in adult monkeys. Thus, early amygdala lesions appeared to have resulted in a greater object memory loss than early hippocampal lesions. However, in light of recent findings from lesion studies in adult monkeys, the object memory impairment after early amygdaloid lesions is better accounted for by damage to the entorhinal and perirhinal cortex than by damage to the amygdaloid nuclei.
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PMID:Long-term effects of neonatal damage to the hippocampal formation and amygdaloid complex on object discrimination and object recognition in rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta). 1063 94