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Acetyl-L-carnitine and alpha-lipoic acid supplementation of aged beagle dogs improves learning in two landmark discrimination tests.

N W Milgram, J A Araujo, T M Hagen, B V Treadwell, B N Ames
Other FASEB journal : official publication of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology 2007 52 citas
PubMed DOI
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Study Design

Tipo de estudio
Other
Población
None
Duración
8.6 weeks
Intervención
Acetyl-L-carnitine and alpha-lipoic acid supplementation of aged beagle dogs improves learning in two landmark discrimination tests. None
Comparador
None
Resultado primario
Acetyl-L-carnitine and alpha-lipoic acid supplementation of aged beagle dogs imp
Dirección del efecto
Neutral
Riesgo de sesgo
Moderate

Abstract

Beagle dogs between 7.6 and 8.8 years of age administered a twice daily supplement of alpha-lipoic acid (LA) and acetyl-L-carnitine (ALC) over approximately 2 months made significantly fewer errors in reaching the learning criterion on two landmark discrimination tasks compared to controls administered a methylcellulose placebo. Testing started after a 5 day wash-in. The dogs were also tested on a variable delay version of a previously acquired spatial memory task; results were not significant. The improved performance on the landmark task of dogs supplemented with LA + ALC provides evidence of the effectiveness of this supplement in improving discrimination and allocentric spatial learning. We suggest that long-term maintenance on LA and ALC may be effective in attenuating age-associated cognitive decline by slowing the rate of mitochondrial decay and cellular aging.

TL;DR

It is suggested that long‐term maintenance on LA and ALC may be effective in attenuating age‐associated cognitive decline by slowing the rate of mitochondrial decay and cellular aging.

Used In Evidence Reviews

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