首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


Increased cognitive sensitivity to scopolamine with age and a perspective on the scopolamine model
Authors:Susan E. Molchan   Rick A. Martinez   James L. Hill   Herbert J. Weingartner   Karen Thompson   Benedetto Vitiello  Trey Sunderland
Abstract:18 older normal volunteers (mean age = 66.5 ± 7.9 years) and 46 younger volunteers (mean age = 27.0 ± 6.1 years) were administered the anticholinergic drug scopolamine (0.5 mg i.v.) followed by a battery of cognitive tests evaluating attention, learning and memory. The older subjects were significantly more impaired than the younger by scopolamine on some tests of learning and memory. This increased sensitivity of the older group to scopolamine is consistent with studies in animals and humans showing decreased cholinergic system function with age. The findings also indicate that age is an important variable to consider in using the scopolamine model of memory impairment. The cognitive impairment caused by scopolamine in younger subjects in this and prior studies is similar to some, but not all aspects of the impairment which occurs in normal aging11,29,37. Scopolamine also caused impairments on digit span and word fluency tasks, which are not consistent with normal aging changes. In the older group of subjects, scopolamine produced aspects of the cognitive impairment which occurs in AD on tests of episodic memory and learning, vigilance-attention, category retrieval, digit span, and number of intrusions64,86,88,91. Other areas of cognition that are of relevence to aging and AD such as psychomotor speed, praxis, concept formation and remote memory were not evaluated in this study. Some of these are being evaluated in ongoing studies, along with additional and more specific tests of retrieval from knowledge memory, implicit memory and attention. The scopolamine model has provided a fruitful pharmacologie starting point for the study of a number of cognitive operations. The idea of dissecting apart aspects of memory systems pharmacologically depends on the availability of neurochemically specific drugs and on the specificity and sensitivity of neuropsychological tests for distinct cognitive operations or domains. Further studies using such tools will aid not only in the understanding of the impairments which occur in aging and in AD, but also of the conceptualization of memory and other cognitive operations and ultimately the physiological mechanisms involved in memory and learning.
Keywords:Alzheimer's disease   Scopolamine   Aging   Acetylcholine   Memory
本文献已被 ScienceDirect 等数据库收录!
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号