Chronic treatment with galantamine rescues reversal learning in an attentional set-shifting test after experimental brain trauma

2019 
Abstract Approximately 10 million new cases of traumatic brain injury (TBI) are reported each year worldwide with many of these injuries resulting in higher order cognitive impairments. Galantamine (GAL), an acetylcholine esterase inhibitor (AChEI) and positive allosteric modulator of nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs), has been reported to ameliorate cognitive deficits after clinical TBI. Previously, we demonstrated that controlled cortical impact (CCI) injury to rats resulted in significant executive function impairments as measured by the attentional set-shifting test (AST), a complex cognitive task analogous to the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test (WCST). We hypothesized that chronic administration of GAL would normalize performance on the AST post-TBI. Isoflurane-anesthetized adult male rats were subjected to moderate CCI (2.8 mm tissue deformation at 4 m/s) or sham injury. Rats were then randomized into one of three treatment groups (i.e., 1 mg/kg GAL, 2 mg/kg GAL, or 1 mL/kg saline vehicle; VEH) or their respective sham controls. GAL or VEH was administered intraperitoneally daily commencing 24 hours post-surgery and until AST testing at 4 weeks post-injury. The AST data revealed significant impairments in the first reversal stage after TBI, seen as increased trials to reach criterion and elevated total errors (p
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