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RECENT PUBLICATIONS
McEvoy, L.K., Smith, M.E., Fordyce, M., Gevins, A. (2006) Characterizing impaired functional alertness from
diphenhydramine in the elderly with performance and neurophysiologic measures. Sleep. 29, 959-966.
Study Objectives: Psychometric task performance measures can be
highly sensitive to manipulations that impair functional alertness in young
adults; such measures have been shown to be less sensitive to reduced
alertness in older adults. The purpose of this study is to determine whether
neurophysiologic measures can aid in the detection and characterization
of impairments in functional alertness in the elderly.
Design: Double-blind, placebo-controlled, counter-balanced, crossover study.
Setting: Research laboratory.
Participants: Twelve healthy older adults (62-75 years of age).
Interventions: Diphenhydramine, 50 mg.
Measurements and Results: Behavioral performance and electroencephalogram
measures were obtained while participants completed spatial
working memory and word recognition episodic memory tasks in a
baseline interval before drug ingestion and in 4 hourly test intervals following
drug ingestion. Relative to placebo, diphenhydramine had marginal
effects on task performance yet was effective in reducing alertness, as
evidenced by subjective ratings and objective neurophysiologic (electroencephalogram)
markers. Diphenhydramine significantly reduced the
amplitude of alertness-sensitive event-related potentials recorded during
working memory task performance, including the N160 and P300. It
also affected neurophysiologic processes underlying episodic memory,
as evidenced by a reduction in the difference in event-related potentials
between old and new words in the word recognition task. Discriminant
analyses incorporating neurophysiologic measures showed that the time
course of the central effects of diphenhydramine in older subjects was
similar to that previously observed in young adults.
Conclusions: These results demonstrate that diphenhydramine has adverse
neurocognitive effects in elderly individuals and highlights the utility
of incorporating direct measures of brain function into assessments of
functional alertness.
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