Shannon_2007_Epilepsy.Behav_10_16

Reference

Title : Effects of antiepileptic drugs on learning as assessed by a repeated acquisition of response sequences task in rats - Shannon_2007_Epilepsy.Behav_10_16
Author(s) : Shannon HE , Love PL
Ref : Epilepsy Behav , 10 :16 , 2007
Abstract :

Patients with epilepsy can have impaired cognitive abilities. Antiepileptic drugs (AEDs) may contribute to the cognitive deficits observed in patients with epilepsy, and have been shown to induce cognitive impairments in healthy individuals. However, there are few systematic data on the effects of AEDs on specific cognitive domains. We have previously demonstrated that a number of AEDs can impair working memory and attention. The purpose of the present study was to evaluate the effects of AEDs on learning as measured by a repeated acquisition of response sequences task in nonepileptic rats. The GABA-related AEDs phenobarbital and chlordiazepoxide significantly disrupted performance by shifting the learning curve to the right and increasing errors, whereas tiagabine and valproate did not. The sodium channel blockers carbamazepine and phenytoin suppressed responding at higher doses, whereas lamotrigine shifted the learning curve to the right and increased errors, and topiramate was without significant effect. Levetiracetam also shifted the learning curve to the right and increased errors. The disruptions produced by triazolam, chlordiazepoxide, lamotrigine, and levetiracetam were qualitatively similar to the effects of the muscarinic cholinergic receptor antagonist scopolamine. The present results indicate that AEDs can impair learning, but there are differences among AEDs in the magnitude of the disruption in nonepileptic rats, with drugs that enhance GABA receptor function and some that block sodium channels producing the most consistent impairment of learning.

PubMedSearch : Shannon_2007_Epilepsy.Behav_10_16
PubMedID: 17174158

Related information

Citations formats

Shannon HE, Love PL (2007)
Effects of antiepileptic drugs on learning as assessed by a repeated acquisition of response sequences task in rats
Epilepsy Behav 10 :16

Shannon HE, Love PL (2007)
Epilepsy Behav 10 :16