| |
RECENT PRESENTATIONS
McEvoy, L.K., Nichols, E.A., Page, B., Smith,
M.E., Gevins, A. (2002). Working and Recognition Memory in Older
Subjects: Effects of an Antihistamine. Cognitive Neuroscience Society
Ninth Annual Meeting. April, San Francisco.
ABSTRACT
Brain cholinergic function is thought to
diminish with age, negatively impacting arousal and cognition. Since
the histamine system exerts a modulatory effect on acetylcholine
release, antihistamines may impair cognitive function in the elderly.
Diphenhydramine (DPH) is a commonly used histamine H1 receptor antagonist
that, in animals, induces memory deficits that are reversible by
acetylcholine agonists. To examine the effect of DPH on recent episodic
and working memory (WM) in healthy older subjects, a double-blind,
counterbalanced study was performed in which EEGs were obtained
from 12 adults (62 -75 yrs; average IQ 125). Recent episodic memory
over a 5-10 min. period was measured with a word recognition task.
WM was assessed with easy and difficult levels of a spatial n-back
task. DPH produced significant subjective drowsiness and a trend
towards slower task performance. In the WM task, DPH increased EEG
power in the 2-10Hz range, suggestive of decreased arousal. DPH
increased the latency and decreased the amplitude of the attention-related
P300 component of the event-related potential (ERP). In the ERPs
recorded during the verbal recognition task, DPH attenuated the
positivity observed to correctly recognized old words (relative
to new distractor words) in the interval of 300-600msec after word
onset. The results indicate that minor alterations to normal histaminergic/cholinergic
neurotransmission can significantly impact neurophysiological correlates
of attention and memory in the elderly. Supported by NIA & NINDS.
Back to Presentations
|