Abstract: | The effect of hypothermia on the retention of the water tank navigation task has been examined in 21 male hooded rats. After a 3-min swimming test on Day 1 the animals were trained on Days 2 and 3 (2 X 12 trials) to find a small submerged platform 1 cm below the surface of a large pool (120 cm in diameter) of opaque water. On Day 4, the rats were divided into three groups (n = 7) which were cooled to colonic temperatures of 22-24 degrees C (H1), 25-27 degrees C (H2), and 28-31 degrees C (H3), respectively, and given 12 retrieval trials in the water tank. Average escape latencies increased from 6 s in normothermic rats on Day 3 to 33, 19, and 12 s on Day 4 in the H1, H2, and H3 groups, respectively. Under the same testing conditions the performance of groups H1, H2, and H3 improved on Day 5 to 20, 8 and 6 s, respectively. It is concluded that spatial memory retrieval is resistant to mild hypothermia (30 degrees C), but that it is severely impaired at body temperatures below 25 degrees C. Reacquisition of the task is slowed down but not fully prevented in deep hypothermia. |