Journal
EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PHARMACOLOGY
Volume 904, Issue -, Pages -Publisher
ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.ejphar.2021.174174
Keywords
Controlled cortical impact (CCI); Citalopram; Antidepressants; Environmental enrichment; Executive function; Attentional set-shifting
Categories
Funding
- National Institutes of Health [NS095950, NS099683, NS110609]
- University of Pittsburgh Physicians/University of Pittsburgh Medical Center Academic Foundation
- University of Pittsburgh Rehabilitation Institute
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The study investigated effective therapies for TBI patients by examining a preclinical rat model, showing that the administration of an antidepressant drug and exposure to environmental enrichment significantly improved cognitive flexibility impairments, with the combined therapy showing the most benefit in recovery.
Traumatic brain injuries (TBI) have led to lasting deficits for an estimated 5.3 million American patients. Effective therapies for these patients remain scarce and each of the clinical trials stemming from success in experimental models has failed. We believe that the failures may be, in part, due to the lack of preclinical assessment of cognitive domains that widely affect clinical TBI. Specifically, the behavioral tasks in the TBI literature often do not focus on common executive impairments related to the frontal lobe such as cognitive flexibility. In previous work, we have demonstrated that the attentional set-shifting test (AST), a task analogous to the clinically-employed Wisconsin Card Sorting Test (WCST), could be used to identify cognitive flexibility impairments following controlled cortical impact (CCI) injury. In this study, we hypothesized that both the administration of the antidepressant drug citalopram (CIT) and exposure to a preclinical model of neurorehabilitation, environmental enrichment (EE), would attenuate cognitive performance deficits on AST when provided alone and lead to greater benefits when administered in combination. Adult male rats were subjected to a moderate-severe CCI or sham injury. Rats were randomly divided into experimental groups that included surgical injury, drug therapy, and housing condition. We observed that both CIT and EE provided significant cognitive recovery when administered alone and reversal learning performance recovery increased the most when the therapies were combined (p < 0.05). Ongoing studies continue to evaluate novel ways of assessing more clinically relevant measurements of high order cognitive TBI-related impairments in the rat model.
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