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Publication : Three weeks of running wheel exposure improves cognitive performance in the aged Tg2576 mouse.

First Author  Nichol KE Year  2007
Journal  Behav Brain Res Volume  184
Issue  2 Pages  124-32
PubMed ID  17698211 Mgi Jnum  J:145119
Mgi Id  MGI:3833524 Doi  10.1016/j.bbr.2007.06.027
Citation  Nichol KE, et al. (2007) Three weeks of running wheel exposure improves cognitive performance in the aged Tg2576 mouse. Behav Brain Res 184(2):124-32
abstractText  If begun early in life, exercise effectively reduces the development of cognitive deficits in transgenic mouse models of Alzheimer's disease (AD). However, the effectiveness of exercise, once the cognitive impairments are established, is not as clear. In terms of translating research in animal models to treatments involving exercise in Alzheimer's disease patients, it is critical to evaluate exercise intervention at time points that address not only prevention, but also treatment of cognitive decline. We provided exercise wheels to Tg2576 (TG) (n=12) and C57BL6 (WT) (n=17) mice at 16-18 months of age for three weeks. At this age animals have significant cognitive impairment and neuropathology consistent with AD. Age matched sedentary TG (n=13) and WT (n=12) mice were also included, as well as groups provided access to an immobile wheel (TG n=9, WT n=12). After three weeks, animals were evaluated in a radial arm water maze. Significant impairments were observed in the sedentary TG mice compared to WT in reference/long-term and working/short-term memory, as well as in probe trials. Exercised TG mice demonstrated improvements in memory, which made them indistinguishable from WT mice on all tasks. In addition, animals provided with an immobile wheel exhibited improvement in some, but not all cognitive measures. Our findings demonstrate that exercise can improve cognitive performance in a mouse model of AD even if applied after the development of pathology.
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