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Dietary zinc supplement militates against ketamine-induced behaviours by age-dependent modulation of oxidative stress and acetylcholinesterase activity in mice.

Olakunle J Onaolapo, Olayemi R Jegede, Omolade Adegoke, Marufat O Ayinde, Oloruntola M Akeredolu et al.
Other Pharmacological reports : PR 2020 7 次引用
PubMed DOI
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Study Design

研究类型
animal_study
样本量
160
持续时间
8 weeks
干预措施
Dietary zinc supplement militates against ketamine-induced behaviours by age-dependent modulation of oxidative stress and acetylcholinesterase activity in mice. 25, 50, or 100 mg/kg of feed (zinc-supplemented diet)
对照组
Placebo
效应方向
Positive
偏倚风险
Moderate

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The potential differential modulatory effects of zinc-supplemented diet on ketamine-induced changes in behaviours, brain oxidative stress, acetylcholinesterase activity, and zinc (ZN) levels were examined in prepubertal and aged mice. METHODS: Aged and prepubertal mice were divided into 2 groups consisting of 80 aged and 80 prepubertal mice, each having 8 treatment groups of 10 animals each. The treatment groups are: vehicle control group (fed standard diet and given intraperitoneal {ip} normal saline), three groups fed ZN-supplemented diet (at 25, 50 and 100 mg/kg of feed) and given ip normal saline, ketamine control group (fed standard diet and given ip ketamine), and finally another three groups fed ZN-supplemented diet (at 25, 50 and 100 mg/kg of feed) and given ip ketamine. Intraperitoneal normal saline (at 2 ml/kg/day) or ketamine (at 30 mg/kg/day) were administered during the last 10 days of study. On day 60, animals were exposed to the open-field, Y-maze, radial-arm maze, and elevated plus maze following which they were euthanised; blood and brain homogenate were used for assessment of biochemical parameters. RESULTS: Zinc supplementation was associated with an increase in food intake and body weight (in both age groups), a reduction in ketamine-induced increase in locomotion, rearing and grooming, and significantly higher working-memory scores (compared to ketamine control). Also, there was a decrease in anxiety-related behaviours, enhanced antioxidant status, reduced lipid peroxidation, and reduced acetylcholinesterase activity. CONCLUSION: In conclusion, dietary ZN supplementation was associated with variable degrees of prevention of ketamine-induced changes, depending on the age of animals.

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