| Literature DB >> 31569393 |
Yuanzhen Hao1, Huixiang Ge2, Mengyun Sun3, Yun Gao4.
Abstract
Depression has become one of the most severe psychiatric disorders and endangers the health of living beings all over the world. In order to explore the molecular mechanism that underlies depression, different kinds of animal models of depression are used in laboratory experiments. However, a credible and reasonable animal model that is capable of imitating the pathologic mechanism of depression in mankind has yet to be found, resulting in a barrier to further investigation of depression. Nevertheless, it is possible to explain the pathologic mechanism of depression to a great extent by a rational modeling method and behavioral testing. This review aims to provide a reference for researchers by comparing the advantages and disadvantages of some common animal depression models.Entities:
Keywords: animal model; behavior test; depression
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31569393 PMCID: PMC6801385 DOI: 10.3390/ijms20194827
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Advantages and disadvantages of animal models of depression.
| Depression Modeling Approaches | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|
| Reserpine-induced model | 1. Medium predictive validity | 1. High mortality rate |
| Learned helplessness model | 1. High construct and face validity | 1. Short depression duration |
| Chronic mild stress model | 1. Great face, construct, and predictive validity | 1. Can waste resources and labor |
| Social defeat stress model | 1. Great face, construct, and predictive validity | 1. Can be confused with anxiety |
| Behavioral tests | ||
| Forced swimming test (FST) | 1. Cheap and fast | 1. High mortality rate |
| Tail suspension test (TST) | 1. An effective test | 1. Incomplete persuasion protocol |
| Open-field test (OFT) | 1. Effective and convenient | 1. More time-consuming |
| Sucrose preference test (SPT) | 1. Can manifest anhedonia | 1. A time-consuming test to prepare |