Hargrave Stephanie H, Bray Emily E, McGrath Stephanie, Alexander Gene E, Block Theadora A, Chao Naomi, Darvas Martin, Douglas Laura E L C, Galante Janet, Kennedy Brenda S, Kusick Breonna, Moreno Julie A, Promislow Daniel E L, Raichlen David A, Switzer Lorelei R, Tees Lily, Underwood Aguilar Mikayla, Urfer Silvan R, MacLean Evan L
Department of Psychology, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, USA.
College of Veterinary Medicine, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, USA.
Geroscience. 2025 Feb;47(1):23-43. doi: 10.1007/s11357-024-01278-x. Epub 2024 Aug 6.
Companion dogs are a valuable model for aging research, including studies of cognitive decline and dementia. With advanced age, some dogs spontaneously develop cognitive impairments and neuropathology resembling features of Alzheimer's disease. These processes have been studied extensively in laboratory beagles, but the cognitive assays used in that context-which rely on time-consuming operant procedures-are not easily scalable to large samples of community-dwelling companion dogs. We developed a battery of five short-form tasks targeting three aspects of cognition that are impaired in Alzheimer's disease: spatial memory, executive functions, and social cognition. In Experiment 1, we tested a cross-sectional sample of dogs (N = 123) and estimated associations between age and task performance. Older dogs scored lower on measures of spatial learning, memory, and response flexibility, and spent less time near, but more time gazing at, the experimenter. We found no differences in associations between age and performance across dogs of different body masses, a proxy for expected lifespan. In Experiment 2, we demonstrated the feasibility of these measures in clinical settings (N = 35). Dogs meeting clinical criteria for moderate or severe cognitive impairment scored lower, on average, than dogs characterized as mildly impaired and healthy agers, although these distributions overlapped. However, few dogs in our study cohort met the criteria for moderate or severe impairment. The measures presented here show promise for deployment in large-scale longitudinal studies of companion dogs, such as the Dog Aging Project.
伴侣犬是衰老研究的宝贵模型,包括认知衰退和痴呆症研究。随着年龄增长,一些犬会自发出现认知障碍和神经病理学特征,类似于阿尔茨海默病。这些过程在实验室比格犬中已得到广泛研究,但在那种情况下使用的认知测定方法——依赖耗时的操作性程序——不容易扩展到大量社区伴侣犬样本。我们开发了一组包含五个简短任务的测试组,针对阿尔茨海默病中受损的认知三个方面:空间记忆、执行功能和社会认知。在实验1中,我们测试了一组犬的横断面样本(N = 123),并估计了年龄与任务表现之间的关联。老年犬在空间学习、记忆和反应灵活性测量中得分较低,在实验者附近停留的时间较少,但注视实验者的时间较多。我们发现不同体重犬(预期寿命的一个指标)的年龄与表现之间的关联没有差异。在实验2中,我们证明了这些测量方法在临床环境中的可行性(N = 35)。符合中度或重度认知障碍临床标准的犬平均得分低于轻度受损和健康老龄犬,尽管这些分布有重叠。然而,我们研究队列中很少有犬符合中度或重度损伤标准。这里介绍的测量方法有望应用于伴侣犬的大规模纵向研究,如犬类衰老项目。