Retrograde memory enhancement by diazepam: its relation to anterograde amnesia, and some clinical implications
- 1 January 1986
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Psychopharmacology
- Vol. 90 (4) , 554-556
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00174078
Abstract
The effect of diazepam on retention of an inhibitory avoidance task was investigated in mice. In Experiment 1, animals were trained in this task, and tested for retention 24 h later. The mice received, 20 min after training, an IP injection of either diazepam (2 mg/kg) or saline; half of the mice in each treatment group were exposed, 40 min after avoidance training (and 20 min after the injections) to a Y maze. Exposure to the Y maze disrupted retention of the avoidance task in the saline-treated animals, and enhanced it in the diazepam-treated mice. Retention of habituation to the Y maze was impaired in the diazepam group. The effect can be explained by an interaction of the drug with the Y maze, by which exposure to the Y maze became facilitatory, instead of deleterious, to retention of the avoidance task. This may or may not be related to anterograde amnesia for the Y maze; and may be related to effects of diazepam seen in clinical practice. In Experiment 2, diazepam was given prior to, instead of after, inhibitory avoidance training; it caused anterograde amnesia for this task, which was not reversed by pre-test diazepam, and was therefore not due to state dependency. In conclusion, the effect of diazepam on inhibitory avoidance learning depends on the time at which the drug is given. A pretraining injection causes amnesia, whereas a post-training injection, while ineffective per se, may facilitate retention of the task when it is followed by exposure to a habituation procedure.Keywords
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