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What animal models can tell us about long-term cognitive dysfunction following sepsis: A systematic review

Savi, F. F. and de Oliveira, A. and de Medeiros, G. F. and Bozza, F. A. and Michels, M. and Sharshar, T. and Dal-Pizzol, F. and Ritter, C.

Neurosci Biobehav Rev (2020) 124: 386–404

DOI: 10.1016/j.neubiorev.2020.12.005

Abstract

Survivors of sepsis often develop long-term cognitive impairments. This review aimed at exploring the results of the behavioral tools and tests which have been used to evaluate cognitive dysfunction in different animal models of sepsis. Two independent investigators searched for sepsis- and cognition-related keywords. 6323 publications were found, of which 355 were selected based on their title, and 226 of these were chosen based on manuscript review. LPS was used to induce sepsis in 171 studies, while CLP was used in 55 studies. Inhibitory avoidance was the most widely used method for assessing aversive memory, followed by fear conditioning and continuous multi-trial inhibitory avoidance. With regard to non-aversive memory, most studies used the water maze, open-field, object recognition, Y-maze, plus maze, and radial maze tests. Both CLP and LPS models of sepsis were effective in inducing short- and long-term behavioral impairment. Our findings help elucidate the mechanisms involved in the pathophysiology of sepsis-induced cognitive changes, as well as the available methods and tests used to study this in animal models.

Citation

Savi, F. F., de Oliveira, A., de Medeiros, G. F., Bozza, F. A., Michels, M., Sharshar, T., Dal-Pizzol, F., & Ritter, C. (2020). What animal models can tell us about long-term cognitive dysfunction following sepsis: A systematic review. Neurosci Biobehav Rev, 124, 386–404. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neubiorev.2020.12.005 Sepsis, Cognitive impairment, Clp, Lps, Memory impairment, Sae, Sepsis-associated encephalopathy

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