hyperforin and Amnesia

hyperforin has been researched along with Amnesia* in 2 studies

Other Studies

2 other study(ies) available for hyperforin and Amnesia

ArticleYear
Proapoptotic and prepulse inhibition (PPI) disrupting effects of Hypericum perforatum in rats.
    Journal of ethnopharmacology, 2009, Apr-21, Volume: 122, Issue:3

    St. John's wort extract is commonly used as a wound healing, anti-inflammatory, anxiolytic, diuretic, antibiotic, antiviral and cancer chemoprotective agent. It also has nootropic and/or antiamnestic effects.. Prepulse inhibition (PPI) of startle response is a valuable paradigm for sensorimotor gating processes. A previous study indicated that single administration of St. John's wort extract (500 mg/kg) caused PPI disruption in rats. The effect of antiamnestic doses of the extract on PPI has not been investigated despite the coexistence of impaired memory and PPI deficit in some neurological disorders.. The effects of acute (500 mg/kg) and chronic (200mg/kg for 3 days) administration of St. John's wort extract were investigated for its antiamnestic activity. The effects of administration of the antiamnestic dose of the extract and hyperforin, its main active component, were tested on PPI of an acoustic startle response in rats. This study also investigated the proapoptotic effect of hyperforin in animals, demonstrating PPI deficit, by electrophoresis of DNA isolated from selected brain areas.. Disruption of PPI resulted after treatment of rats with an antiamnestic dose of the extract (200mg/kg for 3 days) and with hyperforin. Gel electrophoresis showed DNA fragmentation of the cortices of hyperforin-treated animals exhibiting PPI deficit.. The exacerbating effect of St. John's wort extract on PPI deficit may provide a limitation for using the extract to manage cognitive disturbance in psychotic and Huntington's disease patients manifesting PPI deficit.

    Topics: Amnesia; Animals; Apoptosis; Bridged Bicyclo Compounds; Central Nervous System Agents; Cerebral Cortex; Cholinergic Antagonists; DNA Fragmentation; Hypericum; Male; Phloroglucinol; Phytotherapy; Plant Components, Aerial; Plant Extracts; Rats; Rats, Wistar; Reflex, Startle; Scopolamine; Sensory Gating; Terpenes

2009
Hypericum extract and hyperforin: memory-enhancing properties in rodents.
    Pharmacopsychiatry, 2001, Volume: 34 Suppl 1

    Effects of a Hypericum extract in therapeutic use and hyperforin sodium salt were evaluated in rat and mouse avoidance tests. In a conditioned avoidance response (CAR) test on the rat, oral daily administration of hyperforin (1.25 mg/kg/day) or of the extract (50 mg/kg/day) before the training sessions considerably improved learning ability from the second day onwards until the day 7. In addition, the memory of the learned responses acquired during 7 consecutive days of administration and training was largely retained even after 9 days without further treatment or training. The observations made using different doses indicate that these learning-facilitating and/or memory-consolidating effects by the agents follow inverse U-shaped dose-response curves in dose ranges lower than (for hyperforin) or equal to (for Hypericum extract) their effective dose in the behavioral despair test for antidepressants. In a passive avoidance response test on the mouse, a single oral dose (1.25 mg/kg) of hyperforin not only improved memory acquisition and consolidation, but also almost completely reversed scopolamine-induced amnesia. The single Hypericum extract dose tested (25 mg/kg) did not reveal any significant effects in the passive avoidance response (PAR) test on the mouse. These observations suggest that the Hypericum extract could be a novel type of antidepressant with memory enhancing properties, and indicate that hyperforin is involved in its cognitive effects. Pure hyperforin seems to be a more potent antidementia agent than an antidepressant.

    Topics: Amnesia; Animals; Antidepressive Agents; Avoidance Learning; Behavior, Animal; Bridged Bicyclo Compounds; Hypericum; Male; Memory; Mice; Mice, Inbred BALB C; Muscarinic Antagonists; Phloroglucinol; Plant Extracts; Rats; Rats, Wistar; Scopolamine; Terpenes

2001