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Amantadine ameliorates dopamine-releasing deficits and behavioral deficits in rats after fluid percussion injury.


ABSTRACT:

Aims

To investigate the role of dopamine in cognitive and motor learning skill deficits after a traumatic brain injury (TBI), we investigated dopamine release and behavioral changes at a series of time points after fluid percussion injury, and explored the potential of amantadine hydrochloride as a chronic treatment to provide behavioral recovery.

Materials and methods

In this study, we sequentially investigated dopamine release at the striatum and behavioral changes at 1, 2, 4, 6, and 8 weeks after fluid percussion injury. Rats subjected to 6-Pa cerebral cortical fluid percussion injury were treated by using subcutaneous infusion pumps filled with either saline (sham group) or amantadine hydrochloride, with a releasing rate of 3.6 mg/kg/hour for 8 weeks. The dopamine-releasing conditions and metabolism were analyzed sequentially by fast scan cyclic voltammetry (FSCV) and high-pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC). Novel object recognition (NOR) and fixed-speed rotarod (FSRR) behavioral tests were used to determine treatment effects on cognitive and motor deficits after injury.

Results

Sequential dopamine-release deficits were revealed in 6-Pa-fluid-percussion cerebral cortical injured animals. The reuptake rate (tau value) of dopamine in injured animals was prolonged, but the tau value became close to the value for the control group after amantadine therapy. Cognitive and motor learning impairments were shown evidenced by the NOR and FSRR behavioral tests after injury. Chronic amantadine therapy reversed dopamine-release deficits, and behavioral impairment after fluid percussion injuries were ameliorated in the rats treated by using amantadine-pumping infusion.

Conclusion

Chronic treatment with amantadine hydrochloride can ameliorate dopamine-release deficits as well as cognitive and motor deficits caused by cerebral fluid-percussion injury.

SUBMITTER: Huang EY 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC3907421 | biostudies-literature | 2014

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Publications

Amantadine ameliorates dopamine-releasing deficits and behavioral deficits in rats after fluid percussion injury.

Huang Eagle Yi-Kung EY   Tsui Pi-Fen PF   Kuo Tung-Tai TT   Tsai Jing-Jr JJ   Chou Yu-Ching YC   Ma Hsin-I HI   Chiang Yung-Hsiao YH   Chen Yuan-Hao YH  

PloS one 20140130 1


<h4>Aims</h4>To investigate the role of dopamine in cognitive and motor learning skill deficits after a traumatic brain injury (TBI), we investigated dopamine release and behavioral changes at a series of time points after fluid percussion injury, and explored the potential of amantadine hydrochloride as a chronic treatment to provide behavioral recovery.<h4>Materials and methods</h4>In this study, we sequentially investigated dopamine release at the striatum and behavioral changes at 1, 2, 4, 6  ...[more]

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2020-03-09 | GSE131704 | GEO