Ketamine anesthesia enhances fear memory consolidation via noradrenergic activation in the basolateral amygdala

[Display omitted] •Ketamine anesthesia enhances memory consolidation of fearful experiences.•Ketamine enhancing effects on memory arise from the strong sympathomimetic action of the anesthetic agent.•Ketamine anesthesia modulates memory by potentiating adrenergic/noradrenergic signaling to promote a...

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Veröffentlicht in:Neurobiology of learning and memory 2021-02, Vol.178, p.107362-107362, Article 107362
Hauptverfasser: Morena, Maria, Colucci, Paola, Mancini, Giulia F., De Castro, Valentina, Peloso, Andrea, Schelling, Gustav, Campolongo, Patrizia
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container_title Neurobiology of learning and memory
container_volume 178
creator Morena, Maria
Colucci, Paola
Mancini, Giulia F.
De Castro, Valentina
Peloso, Andrea
Schelling, Gustav
Campolongo, Patrizia
description [Display omitted] •Ketamine anesthesia enhances memory consolidation of fearful experiences.•Ketamine enhancing effects on memory arise from the strong sympathomimetic action of the anesthetic agent.•Ketamine anesthesia modulates memory by potentiating adrenergic/noradrenergic signaling to promote aversive memory retention. Trauma patients treated with ketamine during emergency care present aggravated early post- traumatic stress reaction which is highly predictive of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) development and severity. The use of ketamine in the acute trauma phase may directly or indirectly interfere with neural processes of memory consolidation of the traumatic event, thus leading to the formation of maladaptive memories, a hallmark symptom of PTSD. We have recently shown that ketamine anesthesia, immediately after a traumatic event, enhances memory consolidation and leads to long-lasting alterations of social behavior in rats. Based on the evidence that ketamine induces a robust central and peripheral adrenergic/noradrenergic potentiation and that activation of this system is essential for the formation of memory for stressful events, we explored the possibility that the strong sympathomimetic action of ketamine might underlie its memory enhancing effects. We found that rats given immediate, but not delayed, post-training ketamine anesthesia (125 mg/kg) presented enhanced 48-h memory retention in an inhibitory avoidance task and that these effects were blocked by adrenal medullectomy, lesions of the locus coeruleus, systemic or intra-basolateral amygdala ß-adrenergic receptor antagonism. Thus, the memory enhancing effects of ketamine anesthesia are time-dependent and mediated by a combined peripheral-central sympathomimetic action. We elucidated a mechanism by which ketamine exacerbates acute post-traumatic reaction, possibly leading to development of PTSD symptomatology later in life. These findings will help guide for a better management of sedation/anesthesia in emergency care to promote the prophylaxis and reduce the risk of developing trauma-related disorders in trauma victims.
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Trauma patients treated with ketamine during emergency care present aggravated early post- traumatic stress reaction which is highly predictive of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) development and severity. The use of ketamine in the acute trauma phase may directly or indirectly interfere with neural processes of memory consolidation of the traumatic event, thus leading to the formation of maladaptive memories, a hallmark symptom of PTSD. We have recently shown that ketamine anesthesia, immediately after a traumatic event, enhances memory consolidation and leads to long-lasting alterations of social behavior in rats. Based on the evidence that ketamine induces a robust central and peripheral adrenergic/noradrenergic potentiation and that activation of this system is essential for the formation of memory for stressful events, we explored the possibility that the strong sympathomimetic action of ketamine might underlie its memory enhancing effects. 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subjects Arousal
Fear memory
Inhibitory avoidance
Ketamine
Memory consolidation
Post-traumatic stress disorder
title Ketamine anesthesia enhances fear memory consolidation via noradrenergic activation in the basolateral amygdala
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