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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Cognitive deficits in the rat chronic mild stress model for depression: relation to anhedonic-like responses.

Journal:
Behavioural brain research
Year:
2009
Authors:
Henningsen, Kim et al.
Affiliation:
Aarhus University Hospital
Species:
rodent

Abstract

The chronic mild stress (CMS) protocol is widely used to evoke depressive-like behaviours in laboratory rats. The aim of the present study was to examine the effects of chronic stress on cognitive performance. About 70% of rats exposed to 7 weeks of chronic mild stress showed a gradual reduction in consumption of a sucrose solution, indicating an anhedonic-like state. The remaining rats did not reduce their sucrose intake, but appeared resilient to the stress-induced effects on sucrose intake. Cognitive profiling of the CMS rats revealed that chronic stress had a negative effect on performance in the spontaneous alternation test, possibly reflecting a deficit in working memory. This effect was independent of whether the stressed rats were anhedonic-like or stress-resilient as measured by their sucrose intake. CMS did not influence performance in passive avoidance and auditory cued fear conditioning, however, in rats displaying an anhedonic-like profile, CMS increased freezing behaviour in contextual fear conditioning.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/19038290/