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Cannabis smoke and oral Δ9THC enhance working memory in aged but not young adult subjects 
 
With increased legalization of recreational and medical cannabis, use of this drug is growing rapidly among older adults. As cannabis use can impair cognition in young adults, it is critically important to understand how consumption interacts with the cognitive profile of aged individuals, who are already at increased risk of decline. The current study was designed to determine how cannabis influences multiple forms of cognition in young adult and aged rats of both sexes when delivered via two translationally-relevant routes of administration. Acute exposure to cannabis smoke enhanced prefrontal cortex-dependent working memory accuracy in aged males, but impaired accuracy in aged females, while having no effects in young adults of either sex. In contrast, the same cannabis smoke exposure regimen had minimal effects on a hippocampus-dependent trial-unique non-matching to location mnemonic task, irrespective of age or sex. In a second set of experiments, chronic oral consumption of {Delta}9-tetrahydrocannabinol ({Delta}9THC) enhanced working memory in aged rats of both sexes, while having no effects in young adults. In contrast, the same oral {Delta}9THC regimen did not affect spatial learning and memory in either age group. Minimal age differences were observed in {Delta}9THC pharmacokinetics with either route of administration. Together, these results show that cannabis and {Delta}9THC can attenuate working memory impairments that emerge in aging. While these enhancing effects do not extend to hippocampus-dependent cognition, cannabis does not appear to exacerbate age-associated impairments in this cognitive domain. 
 
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