Literature DB >> 15763579

Nociception and locomotor activity are increased in ketogenic diet fed rats.

Denize R Ziegler1, Giovana D Gamaro, Emeli Araújo, Marcio G Bassani, Marcos Luiz Santos Perry, Carla Dalmaz, Carlos-Alberto Gonçalves.   

Abstract

Ketogenic diets have been used to treat epilepsy in children for almost 80 years. However, there are only few studies concerning behavioral effects of these diets, besides their efficacy in treating seizure disorders induced by kainic acid or pentylenetetrazol in rats. Here, rats were fed with a ketogenic diet and locomotion, anxiety and nociception were investigated after 10 weeks. Male Wistar rats were weight matched and divided into two groups: control rats, that received regular laboratory ration, and KD rats, that received ketogenic diet (70% fat, 24% protein and no carbohydrate). Behavioral tests were applied after 10-12 weeks of treatment, and included tests to evaluate exploration (habituation to the open field), anxiety (plus-maze), and nociception (tail-flick measurement). Performance of the animals in the open field revealed a significant difference in the number of crossings, suggesting a higher locomotor activity in animals fed with a ketogenic diet. No differences in anxiety were observed, as evaluated by the plus-maze test. Nociception was measured by the latency in the tail-flick test, and ketogenic rats presented a hypernociceptive response. Yet, these animals responded to a stressor with the classic analgesia, similarly to the controls. The response of ketogenic diet fed rats to the stressor, however, was more prolonged. Exposure to a ketogenic diet may induce higher locomotor activity, together with a hypernociceptive state in the animals, possibly as a result of some alteration in the neural systems involved in the modulation of these behaviors.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15763579     DOI: 10.1016/j.physbeh.2005.01.003

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Physiol Behav        ISSN: 0031-9384


  13 in total

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Authors:  Liu Lin Thio; Nicholas Rensing; Susan Maloney; David F Wozniak; Chengjie Xiong; Kelvin A Yamada
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5.  The effects of a ketogenic diet on behavioral outcome after controlled cortical impact injury in the juvenile and adult rat.

Authors:  K Sofia Appelberg; David A Hovda; Mayumi L Prins
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