Recovery of Water Maze Performance in Aged Versus Young Rats After Brain Injury With the Impact Acceleration Model
- 1 December 2000
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Mary Ann Liebert Inc in Journal of Neurotrauma
- Vol. 17 (12) , 1141-1153
- https://doi.org/10.1089/neu.2000.17.1141
Abstract
Clinically, elderly patients have a higher cognitive morbidity from head trauma than young patients. We have modeled injury in aged rats in an effort to elucidate the pathophysiology of this enhanced sensitivity and, in particular, to determine if there are susceptibility differences in forebrain cholinergic innervation in young versus aged rats. Aged (20–23 months) and young (2–3 months) rats were subjected to injury under halothane anesthesia using the Marmarou impact acceleration model. Injury parameters required adjustment downward for the aged rats (323 g at 1.61 m versus 494 g at 2.06 m) to provide equivalent mortality (30% versus 20%) and loss of righting-reflex times (10–12 min average). At 1 week following injury, the aged animals were markedly more impaired in water maze performance than were young rats, and this difference persisted at least up to 5 weeks following injury. The extent of improvement in performance from 1 to 5 weeks was markedly worse for aged animals compared to young animals. Forebrain synaptosomal choline uptake was decreased in aged injured rats by 8–14% at 1, 3, and 5 weeks postinjury, but not decreased in young injured rats. No differences were noted in entorhinal cortex or hippocampal choline uptake. This model effectively demonstrates the markedly increased susceptibility of older animals to head injury and their decreased capacity for recovery. The neurophysiological basis for this difference is presently unknown, but the differences in cognitive dysfunction between young and aged rats appears to be much greater than would seem to be explained by the small differences in forebrain cholinergic innervation.Keywords
This publication has 59 references indexed in Scilit:
- Cognitive Impairment and Synaptosomal Choline Uptake in Rats Following Impact Acceleration InjuryJournal of Neurotrauma, 2000
- Time Course for Recovery of Water Maze Performance and Central Cholinergic Innervation After Fluid Percussion InjuryJournal of Neurotrauma, 1999
- One-Year Study of Spatial Memory Performance, Brain Morphology, and Cholinergic Markers After Moderate Controlled Cortical Impact in RatsJournal of Neurotrauma, 1999
- Individual Differences in Spatial Memory and Striatal ChAT Activity among Young and Aged RatsNeurobiology of Learning and Memory, 1998
- Rodent models of memory dysfunction in Alzheimer's disease and normal aging: Moving beyond the cholinergic hypothesisLife Sciences, 1994
- Cognitive impairment following traumatic brain injury: the effect of pre- and post-injury administration of scopolamine and MK-801Cognitive Brain Research, 1993
- Anticholinergic sensitivity in the aging rat septohippocampal system as assessed in a spatial memory taskNeurobiology of Aging, 1993
- Glutamate: its role in learning, memory, and the aging brainPsychopharmacology, 1993
- The Effect of Age on Motor and Cognitive Deficits after Traumatic Brain Injury in RatsNeurosurgery, 1992
- The Use of the Morris Water Maze in the Study of Memory and LearningInternational Journal of Neuroscience, 1989