In experiments on young (aged 3 months) and old (aged 26 months) rats, using some conditioned-reflex methods with punishment or positive reinforcement for active and passive avoidance (shuttle-box, step-down, step-through, and water maze), we studied the effects of the standardized extracts of Panax ginseng (G115), Ginkgo biloba (GK501) and their combination Gincosan (PHL-00701). The extracts were administered orally for 7 days before training at three increasing doses: 17, 50, and 150 mg/kg for G115; 10, 30, and 90 mg/kg for GK501; and 27, 80, and 240 mg/kg for PHL-00701. The two extracts and their combination improved the retention of learned behavior. This effect varied considerably with the extracts, with the dose and with the behavioral method used. The results suggest that the Panax ginseng G115 and the Ginkgo biloba GK501 extracts possess properties similar in every respect to those of nootropic drugs. The favorable effects on learning and memory of the combination of G115 plus GK501 and the other pharmacological activities inherent in the extracts characterize this combination, offered as Gincosan as a particularly promising drug in geriatric practice.
The 7-day oral administration of the extracts from Ginkgo biloba (GK501) and Panax ginseng (G115) as well as their combination PHL-00701 (Gincosan@) produced changes in rat behaviour suggesting memory-enhancing effects. Single doses of agonists and antagonists of different serotonin receptor subtypes influenced the rat's capability for retention of learned behaviour and the behavioural effects of the drugs tested. GK501 decreased the density of 5-HT, receptors in the frontal cerebral cortex and hippocampus. Data concerning the effects of the drugs tested suggest the participation of the serotonergic transmitter system as an important neurochemical correlate of rat behaviour and of the memory effects of the drugs studied. This participation is modulated by the differences in the functions of the serotonin receptor subtypes.
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