Interaction between midazolam-induced anterograde amnesia and memory enhancement by treatments given hours later in hippocampus, entorrhinal cortex or posterior parietal cortex
- PMID: 10065935
Interaction between midazolam-induced anterograde amnesia and memory enhancement by treatments given hours later in hippocampus, entorrhinal cortex or posterior parietal cortex
Abstract
Rats were bilaterally implanted with indwelling cannulae in the CA1 region of the dorsal hippocampus, the entorrhinal cortex or the posterior parietal cortex. After recovery from surgery, they were trained in a one-trial step-down inhibitory avoidance task using a 0.3 mA footshock. The animals received i.p. 15 min before training either saline (1 ml/kg) or midazolam (1 mg/kg). Three hours after training they received, through the cannulae, infusions of saline, norepinephrine (0.3 microg/side), SKF38393 (7.5 microg/side), or 8-Br-cAMP (1.25 microg/side) into the brain regions mentioned. Animals were tested for retention 24 h after the training session. Midazolam produced anterograde amnesia, and the post-training treatments (with the exception of SKF38393 given into the entorrhinal cortex) caused retrograde memory facilitation. The amnestic effect of midazolam and the facilitatory effect of the treatments given into the brain cancelled each other out. Therefore, the mechanisms triggered by midazolam can interact with others in areas involved in memory processing several hours after their onset.
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