Anterograde effects of a single electroconvulsive shock on inhibitory avoidance and on cued fear conditioning


Autoria(s): Oliveira,M.G.M.; Bueno,O.F.A.; Gugliano,E.B.
Data(s)

01/08/1998

Resumo

A single electroconvulsive shock (ECS) or a sham ECS was administered to male 3-4-month-old Wistar rats 1, 2, and 4 h before training in an inhibitory avoidance test and in cued classical fear conditioning (measured by means of freezing time in a new environment). ECS impaired inhibitory avoidance at all times and, at 1 or 2 h before training, reduced freezing time before and after re-presentation of the ECS. These results are interpreted as a transient conditioned stimulus (CS)-induced anxiolytic or analgesic effect lasting about 2 h after a single treatment, in addition to the known amnesic effect of the stimulus. This suggests that the effect of anterograde learning impairment is demonstrated unequivocally only when the analgesic/anxiolytic effect is over (about 4 h after ECS administration) and that this impairment of learning is selective, affecting inhibitory avoidance but not classical fear conditioning to a discrete stimulus.

Formato

text/html

Identificador

http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0100-879X1998000800009

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

Associação Brasileira de Divulgação Científica

Fonte

Brazilian Journal of Medical and Biological Research v.31 n.8 1998

Palavras-Chave #electroconvulsive shock #memory #cued fear conditioning #inhibitory avoidance #anxiolytic effect #analgesic effect
Tipo

journal article