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Chronic antioxidant and mitochondrial cofactor administration improves discrimination learning in aged but not young dogs. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examined how age and antioxidant treatment affect cognitive decline in beagles over three years.
  • Young and aged dogs were matched and divided into treatment groups, where antioxidant treatment improved performance in aged dogs during initial learning tasks.
  • While treated aged dogs showed some improvement, young dogs consistently performed better on later tasks, indicating that antioxidants selectively help with specific aspects of age-related cognitive decline rather than overall cognitive function.

Article Abstract

The present experiment was part of a 3-year longitudinal study examining the effects of age and antioxidant treatment on cognitive decline in beagles. Two size-concept tasks were administered following pretraining on a series of two-choice (six subtests) and three-choice size discrimination tasks. Thirty-nine young and aged dogs were matched for age and cognitive ability then divided into four treatment groups. A combined antioxidant-mitochondrial cofactor treatment led to significantly improved performance in aged dogs on the first subtest of the two-choice size discrimination series. Treated aged dogs did not significantly differ from the young. Aged dogs on the antioxidant diet continued to perform better than aged controls on the second and third subtests, but these effects did not achieve significance. Young dogs performed significantly better than the aged dogs on the second and third subtests. The remaining two-choice tasks of the discrimination series were comparatively easy, leading to a floor effect. The antioxidant animals performed better on the three-choice size discrimination, but not on the two size-concept tasks. Antioxidants improved the performance of aged dogs on the initial learning tests, suggesting a selective improvement of factors related to the aging process and specific cognitive processes rather than general cognitive enhancement.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pnpbp.2004.12.011DOI Listing

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