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Chronic stress impairs rat spatial memory on the Y maze, and this effect is blocked by tianeptine pretreatment.
795
Citations
78
References
1996
Year
Y MazeNeuropsychologyChronic Restraint StressSocial SciencesSignificant Dendritic AtrophyMemoryNeurologyCognitive NeuroscienceNeurochemistryChronic Stress ImpairsCognitive ScienceStress HormonePsychiatryCortical RemodelingNeuropharmacologySynaptic PlasticityNeurophysiologyTianeptine PretreatmentProcedural MemoryNeuroscienceBiological PsychiatryCentral Nervous SystemMedicine
Chronic restraint stress causes significant dendritic atrophy of CA3 pyramidal neurons that reverts to baseline within a week. Therefore, the authors assessed the functional consequences of this atrophy quickly (within hours) using the Y maze. Experiments 1-3 demonstrated that rats relied on extrinsic, spatial cues located outside of the Y maze to determine arm location and that rats with hippocampal damage (through kainic acid, colchicine, or trimethyltin) had spatial memory impairments. After the Y maze was validated as a hippocampally relevant spatial task, Experiment 4 showed that chronic restraint stress impaired spatial memory performance on the Y maze when rats were tested the day after the last stress session and that tianeptine prevented the stress-induced spatial memory impairment. These data are consistent with the previously demonstrated ability of tianeptine to prevent chronic stress-induced atrophy of the CA3 dendrites.
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