masterThesis
Influência do ciclo estral no efeito do diazepam na ansiedade e memória de ratas
Fecha
2011-05-17Registro en:
SOUSA, Diego Silveira. Influência do ciclo estral no efeito do diazepam na ansiedade e memória de ratas. 2011. 108 f. Dissertação (Mestrado em Estudos de Comportamento; Psicologia Fisiológica) - Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte, Natal, 2011.
Autor
Sousa, Diego Silveira
Resumen
Memory and anxiety are related phenomena. Several evidences suggest that anxiety is
fundamental for learnining and may facilitate or impair the memory formation process
depending of the context. The majority of animal studies of anxiety and fear use only males as
experimental subjects, while studies with females are rare in the literature. However, the
prevalence in phobic and anxiety disorders is greater in women than in men. Moreover, it is
known that gender maybe influence benzodiazepine effects, the classic drugs used for anxiety
disorders treatment. In this respect, to further investigate if fear/anxiety aspects related to
learning in female subjects would contribute to the study of phobic and anxiety disorders and
their relationship with learning/memory processes, the present work investigates (a) the
effects of benzodiazepine diazepam on female rats performance in a aversive memory task
that assess concomitantly anxiety/emotionality, as the interaction between both; (b) the
influence of estrous cycle phases of female rats on diazepam effects at aversive memory and
anxiety/emotionality, and the interaction between both and (c) the role of hormonal
fluctuations during estrous cycle phases in absence of diazepam effects in proestrus, because
female rats in this phase received or not mifepristone, the antagonist of progesterone receptor,
previously to the diazepam treatment. For this purpose, the plus maze discriminative
avoidance task, previously validated for studies of anxiety concomitantly to
learning/memory, was used. The apparatus employed is an adaptation of a conventional plus
maze, with two opens arms and two closed arms, one of which presenting aversive
stimulation (noise and light). The parameters used were: time in non-aversive arm compared
to time in aversive and percentage of time in aversive arm on several temporal divisions, in
order to evaluate memory; percentage of time in open arms, risk assessment, head dipping and
end exploring to evaluate anxiety ; and distance traveled for locomotion. In experiment I, we
found anxiolytic effect of diazepam only for 4 mg/kg dose, however the amnestic effect
appear at a dose of 2 mg/kg. In second experiment, rats were divided in groups according
estrous cycle phase (metaestrus/diestrus, proestrus e estrus). In this experiment, when we
considered estrous cycle phase or diazepam treatment, the results did not demonstrate any
differences in anxiety/emotionality parameters. The amnestic effects of diazepam occur in
female rats in metestrus/diestrus and estrus and is absent in proestrous rats. Proestrous female
rats that received mifepristone exhibited the amnestic effect of diazepam and also anxiolytic
effects, that it was not previously observed in this dose. The results have demonstrated
dissociation of anxiolytic and amnestic diazepam effects, not previously observed in males; the absence of amnestic effect of diazepam in proestrous phase; and the possible role of
progesterone in aversive memory over diazepam effect, because the mifepristone, associated
with diazepam, caused amnestic effect in proestrus