Repetitive fluoxetine treatment affects long-term memories but not learning
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Ampuero, Estibaliz
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Repetitive fluoxetine treatment affects long-term memories but not learning
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Abstract
Fluoxetine is currently being administered for long-term maintenance and for prophylactic reasons following
the remission of depressive symptoms and several other psychiatric and neurological conditions.
We have previously found that in naïve adult male rats, repetitive administration of fluoxetine induced
maturation of telencephalic dendritic spines. This finding was associated with the presence of a higher
proportion of GluA2- and GluN2A-containing glutamate receptors. To gain further insight into the possible
consequences of such synaptic re-organization on learning and memory processes, we evaluated
hippocampal- and non-hippocampal-dependent memories following administration of 0.7 mg/kg fluoxetine
for four weeks. Standard behavioral tasks were used: the Morris Water Maze (MWM) and Object
Location Memory (OLM) tasks to assess spatial memory and the Novel Object Recognition (NOR) task to
assess recognition memory. We found that treated rats showed normal learning and short-term memory
(1 h post-learning). However, either recent (24 h) or remote (17 days) memories were impaired depending
upon the task. Interestingly, spatial memory impairment spontaneously reverted after 6 weeks of
fluoxetine withdrawal.
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URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/121859
ISSN: doi 10.1016/j.bbr.2013.03.011
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Behavioural Brain Research 247 (2013) 92– 100
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