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By Jonathan Roseland

Applied Neuroscience Strategist, adventuring philosopher, pompous pontificator, writer, K-Selected Biohacker, tantric husband, raconteur, and Smart Drug dealer.

About The Books

Enhancement of hippocampally-mediated learning and protein kinase C activity by oxiracetam

Enhancement of hippocampally-mediated learning and protein kinase C activity by oxiracetam

The effects of oxiracetam on hippocampally-mediated learning performance and hippocampal protein kinase C (PKC) were examined in C57BL/6Ibg (C57) and DBA/2Ibg (DBA) mice. C57 and DBA mice were subjected to daily injections of oxiracetam (50 mg/kg i.p.) or vehicle (0.9% saline) for a total of 9 days. C57 and DBA mice were examined on a modified version of the Morris water maze task and the contextual fear conditioning task on the last 5 or 2 days, respectively, of the 9-day treatment schedule. When compared with controls, C57 and DBA oxiracetam-treated mice showed no difference in motor skill capability to perform these complex learning tasks (swim speed or ability to freeze). Hippocampal PKC activity was measured in cytosolic, loosely-bound, and membrane-bound homogenate fractions. Oxiracetam-treated DBA mice demonstrated a significant increase in spatial learning performance as determined by the Morris task. DBA performance was also improved in contextual learning as determined by the fear conditioning task. The increase in spatial learning performance was correlated to an increase in membrane-bound PKC. No substantial improvements in C57 mice were observed on either learning task nor did hippocampal PKC activity change in response to oxiracetam treatment. These data demonstrate that the learning impairment of DBA mice can be reversed by treatment with a nootropic agent and support previous studies suggesting that PKC may be one mechanism of action for oxiracetam.

Scientific Studies & Papers

Author of Study or Paper
Fordyce DE1, Clark VJ, Paylor R, Wehner JM.
Source
Institute for Behavioural Genetics, University of Colorado at Boulder
Date Published
Brain Res. 1995

Banned on Amazon

My books were banned by Amazon; it's the political correctness police at it again. If you don't acquiesce to the mainstream, neoliberal ideology of the current year, you're not allowed to be a part of the conversation. They don't debate you, they don't challenge your ideas, they don't make counter-arguments - they just silence you.

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