Abstract
Background: Aging process is often accompanied with some degree of decline in all the abilities, including learning and memory. One of the attracting research ï¬elds has been devoted to ï¬nding antiaging drugs. Metformin has shown some memory-enhancing features in aged humans and laboratory animals.AimsandObjective: To evaluate the effects of 50, 75, and 100 mg/kg of metformin on the spatial memory performance of aged rats in the Morris water maze. Materials and Methods: Thirty-two male 24-month-old rats were divided randomly into four groups (n = 8) including control group and 50-, 75-, and 100-mg/kg metformin groups. After 36 days of treatment, the learning process was assessed by the reference memory task in the Morris water maze. All the rats received water maze training (four trials/day for 5 days) to assess the hippocampal-dependentspatiallearningand,then,receiveda60-sprobetrialtestofspatialmemoryretention24hafterthe twentieth trial.Result: Over 5 days of training, metformin (50, 75, and 100 mg/kg/day) treatment signiï¬cantly reduced the latencyandpathlengthtoï¬ndtheescapeplatform(Po0.01).Inprobetrials(withoutplatform),onthelastdayoftraining, the metformin-treated groups spent signiï¬cantly longer time in the platform quadrant when compared with the control group. Among the treated groups, 100 mg/kg dosage of metformin induced the best rehearsals memory (Po 0.05). Conclusion: These results showed that, in the old rats, 36-day orally administered metformin showed a positive influence on the spatial memory performance in the Morris water maze.