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Title: Relationship of hematological variables to learning performance in aged Fischer-344 rats. Author: Spangler EL, Waggie KS, Rea W, Roberts D, Hengemihle J, Danon D, Ingram DK. Journal: Neurobiol Aging; 1995; 16(1):85-9. PubMed ID: 7723940. Abstract: The relationship between hematological variables and the ability to perform behaviorally in two learning tests was evaluated in male F344 rats aged 22-24 months. Rats were screened for ability to meet criterion for learning one-way active avoidance in a straight runway task. Rats failing to meet criterion were given no further testing and were assigned to Group 1 (G1). Rats meeting criterion were tested in a 14-unit T-maze (2 days, 10 trials/day). Failure to negotiate the T-maze within 600 s on any three trials resulted in assignment to Group 2 (G2) with no further testing. Rats successfully completing both tasks constituted Group 3 (G3). Trunk blood was collected following behavioral testing and was assayed to determine red blood cell count (RBC), hematocrit (HCT), hemoglobin (HGB), mean corpuscular volume (MCV), mean corpuscular hemoglobin (MCH), mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration (MCHC), white blood cell count (WBC), bands (BND), polymorphs (POLY), lymphocytes (LYM), monocytes (MON), and eosinophils (EOS). The combined G1/G2 group had significantly lower RBC, HCT, HGB, and EOS but significantly higher MCV and MCH than G3 rats. Correlation analysis revealed a positive relationship of group membership (i.e., learning test completion) to RBC, HCT, HGB, and EOS, but a negative correlation of group membership to MCH. No significant correlation emerged between any hematological characteristic and performance in either behavioral task. These results suggest that a simple blood test to determine HCT may be a useful screen for removal of moribund rats from aging studies attempting to control for effects of health on behavioral performance in rodent models.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]