Department of Integrative Anatomical Sciences, Keck School of Medicine at the University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA 90033, United States.
Department of Integrative Anatomical Sciences, Keck School of Medicine at the University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA 90033, United States.
Behav Processes. 2024 May;218:105044. doi: 10.1016/j.beproc.2024.105044. Epub 2024 Apr 26.
The goal is to understand consequences of anabolic-androgenic steroid (AAS) abuse on cognitive function, using rats as a model. Economic decision making was evaluated in an operant test of effort value discounting, where subjects choose between 2 levers that deliver large and small rewards differing in maximum value and reward contrast. The hypothesis is that chronic high-dose testosterone increases preference for large rewards. Male rats were treated chronically with testosterone (7.5 mg/kg) or vehicle. Initially, all rats preferred the large reward lever when large and small rewards remained fixed at 3 and 1 sugar pellets, respectively. When different reward values were introduced, and with increasing response requirements, testosterone-treated rats made fewer responses for the large reward, and increased omissions. They earned fewer rewards overall. To determine if testosterone impairs memory, rats were tested for recognition memory with the novel object recognition and social transmission of food preference tasks, and for spatial memory with the radial arm maze and Morris water maze. There was not effect of chronic high-dose testosterone on any memory task. These results suggest that testosterone shifts economic decision making towards larger rewards even when they are disadvantageous, but does not alter memory in rats.
目的是利用大鼠模型了解滥用合成代谢雄激素类固醇(AAS)对认知功能的影响。在努力价值折扣的操作性测试中评估经济决策,其中受试者在提供大、小奖励的两个杠杆之间进行选择,奖励的最大值和奖励对比度不同。假设慢性高剂量睾酮会增加对大奖励的偏好。雄性大鼠接受慢性睾酮(7.5mg/kg)或载体处理。最初,当大、小奖励分别固定在 3 个和 1 个糖丸时,所有大鼠都更喜欢大奖励杠杆。当引入不同的奖励值并增加反应要求时,接受睾酮治疗的大鼠对大奖励的反应次数减少,并且漏做的次数增加。它们的总体奖励减少。为了确定睾酮是否损害记忆,用新物体识别和食物偏好的社会传递任务测试大鼠的识别记忆,以及用放射臂迷宫和 Morris 水迷宫测试空间记忆。慢性高剂量睾酮对任何记忆任务均无影响。这些结果表明,睾酮会将经济决策转向更大的奖励,即使这些奖励处于劣势,但不会改变大鼠的记忆。