Literature DB >> 34004206

A combined therapeutic regimen of citalopram and environmental enrichment ameliorates attentional set-shifting performance after brain trauma.

Heather M Minchew1, Hannah L Radabaugh1, Megan L LaPorte1, Kristin E Free1, Jeffrey P Cheng1, Corina O Bondi2.   

Abstract

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.
Copyright © 2021 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Antidepressants; Attentional set-shifting; Citalopram; Controlled cortical impact (CCI); Environmental enrichment; Executive function

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2021        PMID: 34004206      PMCID: PMC8906929          DOI: 10.1016/j.ejphar.2021.174174

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Pharmacol        ISSN: 0014-2999            Impact factor:   5.195


  59 in total

1.  A relatively brief exposure to environmental enrichment after experimental traumatic brain injury confers long-term cognitive benefits.

Authors:  Jeffrey P Cheng; Kaitlyn E Shaw; Christina M Monaco; Ann N Hoffman; Christopher N Sozda; Adam S Olsen; Anthony E Kline
Journal:  J Neurotrauma       Date:  2012-08-27       Impact factor: 5.269

2.  Old dog, new tricks: the attentional set-shifting test as a novel cognitive behavioral task after controlled cortical impact injury.

Authors:  Corina O Bondi; Jeffrey P Cheng; Heather M Tennant; Christina M Monaco; Anthony E Kline
Journal:  J Neurotrauma       Date:  2014-04-10       Impact factor: 5.269

3.  Multimodal early onset stimulation combined with enriched environment is associated with reduced CNS lesion volume and enhanced reversal of neuromotor dysfunction after traumatic brain injury in rats.

Authors:  Marc Maegele; Marcela Lippert-Gruener; Thorsten Ester-Bode; Janika Garbe; Bertil Bouillon; Edmund Neugebauer; Norfrid Klug; Rolf Lefering; Wolfram F Neiss; Doychin N Angelov
Journal:  Eur J Neurosci       Date:  2005-05       Impact factor: 3.386

4.  Protective effects of the 5-HT1A receptor agonist 8-hydroxy-2-(di-n-propylamino)tetralin against traumatic brain injury-induced cognitive deficits and neuropathology in adult male rats.

Authors:  Anthony E Kline; Jianyun Yu; Jaime L Massucci; Ross D Zafonte; C Edward Dixon
Journal:  Neurosci Lett       Date:  2002-11-29       Impact factor: 3.046

5.  Refining environmental enrichment to advance rehabilitation based research after experimental traumatic brain injury.

Authors:  Hannah L Radabaugh; Megan J LaPorte; Anna M Greene; Corina O Bondi; Naima Lajud; Anthony E Kline
Journal:  Exp Neurol       Date:  2017-04-27       Impact factor: 5.330

6.  Donepezil is ineffective in promoting motor and cognitive benefits after controlled cortical impact injury in male rats.

Authors:  Kaitlyn E Shaw; Corina O Bondi; Samuel H Light; Lire A Massimino; Rose L McAloon; Christina M Monaco; Anthony E Kline
Journal:  J Neurotrauma       Date:  2013-03-26       Impact factor: 5.269

7.  A combined therapeutic regimen of buspirone and environmental enrichment is more efficacious than either alone in enhancing spatial learning in brain-injured pediatric rats.

Authors:  Christina M Monaco; Kory M Gebhardt; Sarah M Chlebowski; Kaitlyn E Shaw; Jeffrey P Cheng; Jeremy J Henchir; Margaret F Zupa; Anthony E Kline
Journal:  J Neurotrauma       Date:  2014-09-29       Impact factor: 5.269

Review 8.  The neonatal ventral hippocampal lesion as a heuristic neurodevelopmental model of schizophrenia.

Authors:  Kuei Y Tseng; R Andrew Chambers; Barbara K Lipska
Journal:  Behav Brain Res       Date:  2008-12-03       Impact factor: 3.332

9.  Orbital prefrontal cortex mediates reversal learning and not attentional set shifting in the rat.

Authors:  Kerry McAlonan; Verity J Brown
Journal:  Behav Brain Res       Date:  2003-11-30       Impact factor: 3.332

10.  Cognitive inflexibility after prefrontal serotonin depletion is behaviorally and neurochemically specific.

Authors:  H F Clarke; S C Walker; J W Dalley; T W Robbins; A C Roberts
Journal:  Cereb Cortex       Date:  2006-02-15       Impact factor: 5.357

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