Differential effect of antipsychotics on place navigation of rats in the Morris water maze

1996 
A group of novel neuroleptics (e.g. olanzapine, seroquel, sertindole and ziprasidone) and already marketed compounds (e.g. clozapine, haloperidol and risperidone) were tested for acute effect on spatial learning and memory in Morris' water maze task. Young rats were trained for 4 consecutive days (three trials/day) to find a platform situated beneath the water surface. Two compounds, sertindole and seroquel, were without effect on spatial performance, whereas clozapine impaired performance on the first 2 test days but showed no effect compared to the controls on the last 2 test days. Ziprasidone and olanzapine markedly impaired spatial memory without affecting motor function (measured by the swimming speed). Risperidone and haloperidol also impaired performance but in addition both compounds significantly lowered the swimming speed. The present study indicates that several of the compounds impair spatial learning in Morris water maze. This might be of clinical importance in the treatment of schizophrenics, as many of these patients already show severe cognitive deficits. Therefore, certain antipsychotics could worsen the preexisting memory deficits in schizophrenic patients and this aspect should be considered before antipsychotic treatment.
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