Cognitive and affective models of psychedelics in rodents.

International review of neurobiology Pub Date : 2025-01-01 Epub Date: 2025-03-10 DOI:10.1016/bs.irn.2025.02.002
Dasha Anderson, Emma S J Robinson
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Abstract

In recent years, public and academic interest into psychedelics has increased, given the clinical evidence of their potential benefits for treating psychiatric conditions such as major depressive disorder (MDD). While this has been accompanied by several landmark human studies, mechanistic studies in rodents are still relatively few, but such studies are crucial for understanding the neurobiological underpinnings of the therapeutic effects of psychedelics. However, findings from rodent studies will only be of benefit to patients if they achieve translational validity. In this chapter, we will critically appraise rodent assays traditionally used to study cognition and affect, summarising existing findings with psychedelics. We will also highlight novel, translationally valid assays that have already been used or could be used in the future to study these drugs. We argue that the adoption of translational assays is critical for the interpretation of animal studies of psychedelic effects on cognition and affect. We also discuss how these studies have the potential to help unravel the mechanisms which contribute to their therapeutic effects but only if they involve relevant doses.

啮齿动物致幻剂的认知和情感模型。
近年来,公众和学术界对致幻剂的兴趣有所增加,因为临床证据表明它们对治疗精神疾病(如重度抑郁症(MDD))有潜在的好处。虽然这已经伴随着几项具有里程碑意义的人类研究,但对啮齿动物的机制研究仍然相对较少,但这些研究对于理解迷幻药治疗效果的神经生物学基础至关重要。然而,来自啮齿动物研究的发现只有在达到转化有效性的情况下才会对患者有益。在本章中,我们将批判性地评估传统上用于研究认知和情感的啮齿动物分析,总结现有的迷幻药发现。我们还将重点介绍已经使用或将来可能用于研究这些药物的新颖,翻译有效的检测方法。我们认为,采用翻译分析对于解释致幻剂对认知和情感的影响的动物研究至关重要。我们还讨论了这些研究如何有潜力帮助揭示导致其治疗效果的机制,但前提是它们涉及相关剂量。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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