BACKGROUND: Elevated endogenous levels of corticosteroids cause neural dysfunction and loss, especially within the hippocampus, as well as cognitive impairment in hippocampus-mediated tasks. Because Cushing's syndrome patients suffer from hypercortisolism, they represent a unique opportunity to study the impact of elevated glucocorticoids on cognitive functions. The aim of this study was to examine the performance of Cushing's syndrome patients on trace eyeblink conditioning, a cross-species, hippocampal-mediated test of learning and memory. METHODS: Eleven Cushing's syndrome patients and 11 healthy control subjects participated in an eyeblink trace conditioning test (1000-msec trace) and a task of declarative memory for words. Salivary cortisol was collected in both the patients and the control subjects, and urinary free cortisol was collected in the patients only. RESULTS: The patients exhibited fewer conditional responses and remembered fewer words, compared with the control subjects. Cortisol levels correlated with immediate and delayed declarative memory only. Conditional response correlated with delayed recall after controlling for the magnitude of unconditional response. CONCLUSIONS: The integrity of the hippocampus seems to be compromised in Cushing's syndrome patients. Trace eyeblink conditioning might be useful both as a clinical tool to examine changes in hippocampus function in Cushing's disease patients and as a translational tool of research on the impact of chronic exposure of glucocorticoids.
BACKGROUND: Elevated endogenous levels of corticosteroids cause neural dysfunction and loss, especially within the hippocampus, as well as cognitive impairment in hippocampus-mediated tasks. Because Cushing's syndromepatients suffer from hypercortisolism, they represent a unique opportunity to study the impact of elevated glucocorticoids on cognitive functions. The aim of this study was to examine the performance of Cushing's syndromepatients on trace eyeblink conditioning, a cross-species, hippocampal-mediated test of learning and memory. METHODS: Eleven Cushing's syndromepatients and 11 healthy control subjects participated in an eyeblink trace conditioning test (1000-msec trace) and a task of declarative memory for words. Salivary cortisol was collected in both the patients and the control subjects, and urinary free cortisol was collected in the patients only. RESULTS: The patients exhibited fewer conditional responses and remembered fewer words, compared with the control subjects. Cortisol levels correlated with immediate and delayed declarative memory only. Conditional response correlated with delayed recall after controlling for the magnitude of unconditional response. CONCLUSIONS: The integrity of the hippocampus seems to be compromised in Cushing's syndromepatients. Trace eyeblink conditioning might be useful both as a clinical tool to examine changes in hippocampus function in Cushing's diseasepatients and as a translational tool of research on the impact of chronic exposure of glucocorticoids.
Authors: Dragana I Claflin; Kevin D Schmidt; Zachary D Vallandingham; Michal Kraszpulski; Michael B Hennessy Journal: Neurobiol Learn Mem Date: 2017-05-22 Impact factor: 2.877
Authors: Sundari Chetty; Aaron R Friedman; Kereshmeh Taravosh-Lahn; Elizabeth D Kirby; Christian Mirescu; Fuzheng Guo; Danna Krupik; Andrea Nicholas; Anna Geraghty; Amrita Krishnamurthy; Meng-Ko Tsai; David Covarrubias; Alana Wong; Darlene Francis; Robert M Sapolsky; Theo D Palmer; David Pleasure; Daniela Kaufer Journal: Mol Psychiatry Date: 2014-02-11 Impact factor: 15.992