Abstract

There has been considerable interest in developing an animal model of the neuropsychological toxicity of chemotherapeutic agents used in the treatment of patients with cancer, especially children, since these agents often cause significant, long-term neuropsychological deficits. Yanovski, Packer, Levine, Davidson, Micalizzi, D'Angio (13) recently proposed such a model based on their finding that methotrexate retarded the formation of aversive Pavlovian excitatory associations. The present experiment examined the generality of methotrexate induced cognitive impairments by testing rats in Appetitive Pavlovian Conditioning tasks and a Conditioned Taste Aversion paradigm. The results of our study revealed no impairment following methotrexate exposure on the Appetitive Pavlovian tasks or on the Taste Aversion task, relative to two control conditions. While there were a number of methodological differences between the present experiment and those conducted by Yanovski et al. (13), the present results question the robustness and generality of Yanovski's et al. (13) animal model.

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