Hypericum extract and hyperforin:
memory-enhancing properties in rodents
by
Klusa V, Germane S, Noldner M, Chatterjee SS.
Department of Pharmacology,
Faculty of Medicine,
University of Latvia, Riga.
vijaklus@acad.latnet.lv
Pharmacopsychiatry 2001 Jul; 34 Suppl 1:S61-9
ABSTRACT
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.
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