Neurobiology of Aging

Recovery From GABA-Mediated Hemiplegia in Young and Aged Rats: Effects of Catecholaminergic Manipulations


Authors:

  • Simon Brailowsky

  • Robert T. Knight

Date: 1987

PubMed: 3683725

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Abstract:

We investigated the participation of catecholaminergic mechanisms in the functional recovery from motor cortex lesions in young (9 months) and aged (26 months) rats. The animals were studied during the recovery period from an hemiplegic syndrome secondary to small motor cortex lesions potentiated by the localized, chronic (7 days) infusion of GABA into the lesion site. Acute administration of haloperidol (0.1 mg/kg IP) to these recovered animals induced a re-emergence of the contralateral motor syndrome in both groups. In the young group, the haloperidol-induced hemiplegia lasted one day whereas in the aged animals the deficit was significantly prolonged lasting three days. Apomorphine administration (0.5 mg/kg IP) prior to or immediately after haloperidol injection failed to prevent or reverse the reappearance of the motor deficit. Adult animals recovered from motor cortex aspirations performed 7 to 12 months prior were refractory to haloperidol effects. Amphetamine administration to young rats treated chronically with saline or GABA infusion into the somatomotor region also failed to alter the clinical evolution of the motor deficit. The evidence suggests that dopaminergic mechanisms are involved in the functional recovery from brain lesions and that these mechanisms are most susceptible to neuroleptic blockade during the early post-lesional period. The deleterious effects of dopaminergic blockade are heightened in aged populations. The use of dopaminergic antagonists in brain-lesioned subjects, and particularly in geriatric populations, is considered potentially harmful, particularly in the early stages of the recovery process.


Aging decreases auditory event-related potentials to unexpected stimuli in humans


Authors:

  • Robert T. Knight

Date: 1987

PubMed: 3587487

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Abstract:

A P300 event-related potential (P3a) was recorded to unexpected, deviant auditory stimuli requiring no behavioral response. This brain potential underwent systematic latency prolongation and amplitude decrease with advancing age. The age-related changes paralleled those of the P300 (P3b) recorded in target detection tasks. These results provide physiological evidence of a decremented CNS response to unexpected stimuli with aging.