Journal of Neuroscience, Vol 4, 2856-2865, Copyright © 1984 by Society for Neuroscience
Regional changes in brain glucose metabolism reflect cognitive impairments in aged rats
FH Gage, PA Kelly and A Bjorklund
Aged rats (22 to 24 months) and young control rats (3 months) were tested
in a battery of behavioral tests which included tests of learning, place
navigation, sensorimotor integration, motor coordination, activity, and
exploration. Following testing all animals were analyzed in an
unanesthetized state for their local glucose utilization. Significant
differences in glucose utilization were found between the aged and young
groups on some behaviors and in some brain regions. There was considerable
variability in the aged group in both their behavioral performance and
their glucose utilization scores; thus, attempts were made to determine
whether the variability in the degree of impairment within any particular
behavioral test was correlated to the regional glucose utilization scores
in any of the 45 brain regions analyzed. In two of the behavioral tests
employed (i.e., one for learning and one for place navigation), the decline
in performance correlated significantly with the decrement in regional
glucose utilization. Moreover, the performance in these two tests showed
significant correlation with glucose use in only five regions (dentate
gyrus, medial septum-diagonal band area, hippocampal CA1, hippocampal CA3,
and prefrontal cortex). These results show that the learning impairments in
the aged rats are related to the extent of decrease in glucose utilization
in restricted areas of the limbic system. In addition, the results show
that the individual rats within an aged rat population develop cognitive
impairments to a variable degree and that the aged rats with the most
pronounced learning impairments are the ones exhibiting the most severe
functional decrements, in terms of glucose utilization, in the
septohippocampal system and the prefrontal cortex. This suggests that aging
rats may be interesting not only for the study of the normal aging process,
but also as a model of dementia.