Skip to main content
Journal of Neural Transplantation & Plasticity logoLink to Journal of Neural Transplantation & Plasticity
. 1993;4(4):289–297. doi: 10.1155/NP.1993.289

Adrenal Medullary Grafts Restore Olfactory Deficits and Catecholamine Levels of 6-OHDA Amygdala Lesioned Animals

Juan Fernández-Ruiz 1, Rubén Guzmán 2, María Dolores Martínez 2, María Isabel Miranda 1, Federico Bermúdez-Rattoni 1, René Drucker-Colín 1, 2,2
PMCID: PMC2565270  PMID: 7948179

Abstract

Aside from motor and cognitive deficits, Parkinson patients also manifest a little-studied olfactory deficit. Since in Parkinson's disease there is a dopamine depletion of the amygdala due to mesocorticolimbic system degeneration, we decided to test olfactory and taste performance of 6-OHDA amygdala lesioned rats, as well as the possible restoration of either function with adrenal medullary transplants.

Two 6-OHDA lesioned groups and one control group were tested in the potentiation of odor by taste aversion paradigm. On taste aversion none of the groups showed any impairment. In contrast, the 6-OHDA lesioned rats showed a marked impairment in olfactory aversion. At this point, one of the lesioned groups received a bilateral adrenal medullary graft within the lesioned area. After two months, all groups were submitted again to the behavioral paradigm. Taste remained unaffected, but the lesioned only group did not recover either olfactory aversion or normal catecholamine levels. The grafted group, on the other hand, restored olfactory aversion and catecholamine levels. It can be concluded from this study that catecholamine depletion of the amygdala is sufficient to produce a selective olfactory deficit, not accompanied by taste impairments, and that such a deficit can be reversed by adrenal medullary transplants, which in turn restore catecholamine levels.

Full Text

The Full Text of this article is available as a PDF (758.7 KB).


Articles from Journal of Neural Transplantation & Plasticity are provided here courtesy of Wiley

RESOURCES