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    The Effects of Insulin-Induced Moderate Hypoglycemia on Hippocampal Plasticity

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    PANCREAS Final Thesis Submission.pdf (952.1Kb)
    No. of downloads: 434

    Date
    2015
    Author
    Frankel, Joseph
    Gunther, Kelley
    Matthews, Lex
    Plakkot, Siddarth
    Ser, Eileen
    Shapiro, Melanie
    Weng, Peter
    Wilkin, Danielle
    Xu, Linhan
    Advisor
    Glasper, Erica
    DRUM DOI
    https://doi.org/10.13016/M2K04F
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    Abstract
    Self-regulation of blood glucose in diabetics via insulin administration introduces the risk of hypoglycemia. Previous studies have shown hypoglycemia damages the dentate gyrus, an area of the hippocampus associated with anxiety- and depressive-like behavior. To date, only depressive-like behaviors have been observed following moderate hypoglycemia. This study sought to examine whether acute moderate hypoglycemia induces both behaviors due to high clinical comorbidity. One episode of moderate hypoglycemia was induced in a male Sprague-Dawley rat. Twenty-four hours later, hippocampal function was evaluated via the elevated plus maze and the forced swim test to assess anxiety-like and depressive-like behavior. Results, though not statistically significant, suggested that acute moderate hypoglycemia may increase anxiety- and depressive-like behavior. These findings may elucidate hypoglycemia-related behavioral changes.
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/1903/16765
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    DRUM is brought to you by the University of Maryland Libraries
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