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Naloxone changes self-ratings but not performance in normal subjects
Authors:Sandra E. File  Trevor Silverstone
Affiliation:(1) Department of Pharmacology, The School of Pharmacy, University of London, 29/39 Brunswick Square, WC1N 1AX London, England;(2) Academic Unit of Human Psychopharmacology, Medical College of St Bartholomew's Hospital, EC1A 7BE London, England
Abstract:
The effects of single intravenous doses of naloxone (0.8 and 1.6 mg) in a variety of performance tasks and on subjective ratings of mood and bodily symptoms were investigated in 12 student volunteers. Naloxone was without effect on any of the performance measures. However, 5 min after naloxone (1.6 mg) the subjects felt significantly more troubled, mentally slow, incompetent, withdrawn and physically tired, and less irritable. These effects appeared to be dose-related since 0.8 mg produced similar, but not statistically significant changes. Sixty-five minutes after the higher dose subjects felt significantly more muzzy and incompetent: in contrast to the effects at 5 min they now felt significantly more irritable. These results are difficult to explain solely in terms of opiate receptor blockade.Wellcome Trust Senior Lecturer
Keywords:Naloxone  Mental testing  Self-ratings  Sedation  Normal subjects
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