Acute ethanol administration produces larger spatial and nonspatial memory impairments in 29–33 month old rats compared to adult and 18–24 month old rats

The average age of the population in many countries is continuing to increase. Older people continue to consume alcohol, often in a binge like fashion. Previous research has demonstrated that older human subjects and aged animal subjects have an increased sensitivity to the effects of ethanol on a v...

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Veröffentlicht in:Pharmacology, biochemistry and behavior biochemistry and behavior, 2020-12, Vol.199, p.173074-173074, Article 173074
Hauptverfasser: Matthews, Douglas B., Scaletty, Samantha, Schreiber, Areonna, Trapp, Sarah
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The average age of the population in many countries is continuing to increase. Older people continue to consume alcohol, often in a binge like fashion. Previous research has demonstrated that older human subjects and aged animal subjects have an increased sensitivity to the effects of ethanol on a variety of behaviors. However, it has yet to be determined if acute ethanol exposure impairs spatial and/or nonspatial memory to a greater extent in aged rats compared to adult rats. In the current studies we trained male rats ranging in age from young adult (2 months of age) to aged rats (29–33 months of age) in the standard nonspatial task followed by the standard spatial task in the Morris water maze. Only animals deemed “cognitively-spared”, that is aged animals that learn as well as young animals, were administered one of two doses of moderate ethanol and had their memory tested 30 min later. Acute ethanol administration produced similar performance impairments in spatial and nonspatial memory in all cognitively-spared animals except for the 29–33 month old animals which showed a significantly greater cognitive impairment in both tasks. In addition, blood ethanol levels were similar across all ages. The present work adds to the growing literature on the selective effects of acute ethanol exposure in aged animals. •Acute ethanol produces greater cognitive deficits in aged animals regardless of task demands.•Acute ethanol produces greater spatial memory deficits compared to nonspatial memory.•Cognitive deficits in aged animals are not due to differential blood ethanol concentrations.
ISSN:0091-3057
1873-5177
DOI:10.1016/j.pbb.2020.173074