0
Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Environmental Sources Sign in to save

A new approach to explore the correlation between declarative memory and anxiety in animal models of schizophrenia and microplastic pollution

Behavioural Brain Research 2023 4 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 45 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Alexandra Săvucă, Alexandra Săvucă, Alexandra Săvucă, Alexandrina-Ștefania Curpăn, Alexandrina-Ștefania Curpăn, Alexandra Săvucă, Alexandra Săvucă, Alexandra Săvucă, Alexandra Săvucă, Alexandra Săvucă, Alexandra Săvucă, Alexandrina-Ștefania Curpăn, Alexandra Săvucă, Alexandra Săvucă, Alexandra Săvucă, Mircea Nicoară, Carmen Solcan Alexandrina-Ștefania Curpăn, Mircea Nicoară, Alexandrina-Ștefania Curpăn, Luminiţa Diana Hrițcu, Mircea Nicoară, Luminiţa Diana Hrițcu, Alexandrina-Ștefania Curpăn, Luminiţa Diana Hrițcu, Alexandra Săvucă, Mircea Nicoară, Alexandrina-Ștefania Curpăn, Alexandrina-Ștefania Curpăn, Carmen Solcan Mircea Nicoară, Mircea Nicoară, Mircea Nicoară, Mircea Nicoară, Mircea Nicoară, Mircea Nicoară, Mircea Nicoară, Mircea Nicoară, Alina-Costina Luca, Alin-Stelian Ciobica, Alin-Stelian Ciobica, Mircea Nicoară, Mircea Nicoară, Carmen Solcan

Summary

This animal model study explored a new approach to investigating the link between microplastic exposure, declarative memory, and anxiety in a schizophrenia context, finding that microplastic accumulation in the brain may affect cognition and mental health.

Polymers

The discovery of new detrimental effects associated with microplastic pollution is ever-growing and reaching alarming rates worldwide, as it is linked to numerous disorders such as lung diseases, gastrointestinal problems, and cancer. However, a less explored issue is their impact on mental health, more precisely schizophrenia, even though several studies have shown the presence of microplastics in air, water, soil, and even food, thus making them a significant part of our daily dietary intake. It is also well known that declarative memory and anxiety levels are impaired in schizophrenia. However, apart from the novel object recognition test, the possibilities for testing memory in zebrafish are quite limited. For these reasons, we designed a novel memory test based on rewards, a learning period, and zebrafish's natural preference for certain colors. Among the results, our fish preferred the color yellow over red, and we illustrated that ketamine and its combination with methionine provide a robust model that seems to better represent the aspects of schizophrenia in animal models. Moreover, surprisingly, we observed that microplastics (more precisely, polypropylene fibers) ingested by animals through the diet seem to act as a buffer against ketamine toxicity and as an enhancer for methionine exposure. Moreover, according to our results, groups with higher anxiety levels seem to perform better on the memory test.

Sign in to start a discussion.

Share this paper