Cognition, Behavior, and Memory
Author: Valentin Cabrera | Email: valentin.cabrera@unc.edu.ar
Valentín Cabrera 1°, Ana Fabiola Macchione 1°, Paula Abate 1°, Verónica Balaszczuk 1°
1° Laboratorio de Psicología Experimental. Instituto de Investigaciones Psicológicas, IIPsi-UNC-CONICET. Córdoba, Argentina.
The Panamerican Health Organization reports to Argentina among Latin American countries with the highest alcohol drinking per capita. Adolescents are among the most vulnerable to negative alcohol effects. Ethanol (EtOH) exposure may cause behavioral disorders related to anxiety and memory impairments. Besides, ω-3 mitigates EtOH-induced effects on anxiety-like behaviors and spatial memory in neonate or adult rats. Yet, no literature was found about these effects in adolescence.
In this study, we analyze the behavioral effects of EtOH exposure and the possible mitigation of ω-3 or DHA (one of its main components) in adolescent Wistar rats. We administered 2 or 0g/kg of EtOH (ig) at postnatal days-PDs 28, 30 and 32. 15 min after, one set of animals received ω-3 (720mg/kg, ig) or its equivalent volume of corn oil and were evaluated in an elevated plus maze (PD36) to measure anxiety-like behavior. Other animal groups received DHA (1mg/kg, ip) or an equivalent volume of albumin and were evaluated in a Barnes maze to measure short- (PD36) and long-term (PD41) spatial memory.
EtOH treated animals spend less time in open arms, but this time increases significantly in EtOH+ω-3 animals. Besides, EtOH animals traveled more distance prior to escape hole at PD41, but this variable decreases in EtOH+DHA animals. These results suggest that, while EtOH elicits anxiety-like behavior and impairs long-term spatial memory, ω-3 or DHA seem to mitigate both negative EtOH effects in adolecents.