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Anterior perirhinal cortex kindling produces long-lasting effects on anxiety and object recognition memory

Hannesson, D K ; Howland, J G ; Pollock, M ; Mohapel, Paul LU ; Wallace, A E and Corcoran, M E (2005) In European Journal of Neuroscience 21(4). p.1081-1090
Abstract
Temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) is frequently accompanied by memory impairments and, although their bases are unknown, most research has focused on the hippocampus. The present study investigated the importance of another medial temporal lobe structure, the perirhinal cortex (Prh), in changes in memory in TLE using kindling as a model. Rats were kindled twice daily with anterior Prh stimulation until three fully generalized seizures were evoked. Beginning 7 days later and on successive days, rats were tested in an elevated plus maze, a large circular open field, an open field object exploration task and a delayed-match-to-place task in a water maze in order to assess anxiety-related and exploratory behaviour, object recognition memory and... (More)
Temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) is frequently accompanied by memory impairments and, although their bases are unknown, most research has focused on the hippocampus. The present study investigated the importance of another medial temporal lobe structure, the perirhinal cortex (Prh), in changes in memory in TLE using kindling as a model. Rats were kindled twice daily with anterior Prh stimulation until three fully generalized seizures were evoked. Beginning 7 days later and on successive days, rats were tested in an elevated plus maze, a large circular open field, an open field object exploration task and a delayed-match-to-place task in a water maze in order to assess anxiety-related and exploratory behaviour, object recognition memory and spatial cognition. Kindling increased anxiety-related behaviour in both the elevated plus and open field mazes and disrupted spontaneous object recognition but spared all other behaviours tested. These results are consistent with other findings indicating a greater role for the Prh in object memory and emotional behaviour than in spatial memory and contrast with the selective disruption of spatial memory produced by dorsal hippocampal kindling. The site-selectivity of the behavioural disruptions produced by kindling indicates that such effects are probably mediated by changes particular to the site of seizure initiation rather than to changes in the characteristic circuitry activated by limbic seizure generalization. Further investigation of the behavioural effects of Prh kindling may be useful for studying the mechanisms of mnemonic and affective dysfunction associated with TLE and offer insights into bases for variability in such dysfunction across patients. (Less)
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author
; ; ; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
memory, spatial, object memory, hippocampus, exploration, anxiety, epilepsy
in
European Journal of Neuroscience
volume
21
issue
4
pages
1081 - 1090
publisher
Wiley-Blackwell
external identifiers
  • wos:000227652600024
  • pmid:15787713
  • scopus:16244381731
ISSN
1460-9568
DOI
10.1111/j.1460-9568.2005.03938.x
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
be759362-983f-4a0e-b85d-611a6f61fe4e (old id 249022)
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 12:35:01
date last changed
2022-02-26 17:05:48
@article{be759362-983f-4a0e-b85d-611a6f61fe4e,
  abstract     = {{Temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) is frequently accompanied by memory impairments and, although their bases are unknown, most research has focused on the hippocampus. The present study investigated the importance of another medial temporal lobe structure, the perirhinal cortex (Prh), in changes in memory in TLE using kindling as a model. Rats were kindled twice daily with anterior Prh stimulation until three fully generalized seizures were evoked. Beginning 7 days later and on successive days, rats were tested in an elevated plus maze, a large circular open field, an open field object exploration task and a delayed-match-to-place task in a water maze in order to assess anxiety-related and exploratory behaviour, object recognition memory and spatial cognition. Kindling increased anxiety-related behaviour in both the elevated plus and open field mazes and disrupted spontaneous object recognition but spared all other behaviours tested. These results are consistent with other findings indicating a greater role for the Prh in object memory and emotional behaviour than in spatial memory and contrast with the selective disruption of spatial memory produced by dorsal hippocampal kindling. The site-selectivity of the behavioural disruptions produced by kindling indicates that such effects are probably mediated by changes particular to the site of seizure initiation rather than to changes in the characteristic circuitry activated by limbic seizure generalization. Further investigation of the behavioural effects of Prh kindling may be useful for studying the mechanisms of mnemonic and affective dysfunction associated with TLE and offer insights into bases for variability in such dysfunction across patients.}},
  author       = {{Hannesson, D K and Howland, J G and Pollock, M and Mohapel, Paul and Wallace, A E and Corcoran, M E}},
  issn         = {{1460-9568}},
  keywords     = {{memory; spatial; object memory; hippocampus; exploration; anxiety; epilepsy}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{4}},
  pages        = {{1081--1090}},
  publisher    = {{Wiley-Blackwell}},
  series       = {{European Journal of Neuroscience}},
  title        = {{Anterior perirhinal cortex kindling produces long-lasting effects on anxiety and object recognition memory}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1460-9568.2005.03938.x}},
  doi          = {{10.1111/j.1460-9568.2005.03938.x}},
  volume       = {{21}},
  year         = {{2005}},
}