4.1 Article

Localization of Scopolamine Induced Electrocortical Brain Activity Changes, in Healthy Humans at Rest

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGY
Volume 53, Issue 6, Pages 619-625

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jcph.83

Keywords

brain mapping; electroencephalography; motion sickness; parietal lobe; scopolamine hydrobromide

Funding

  1. DLR (Deutsches Zentrum fur Luft und Raumfahrt
  2. German Space Agency) [50WB0832]

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To prevent the participants of parabolic flights from nausea they are optionally treated with subcutaneously injected antiemetic scopolamine. The range of side effects of this substance include reductions of the -2 frequency band. Previous studies, however, have given no information as to which generator centers are responsible for this effect. The objective of this study therefore, is to identify the cortex area that may be responsible for this effect. Six participants were subcutaneously administered 0.7mg of scopolamine. EEG was recorded for 10minutes before to 20minutes after injection. Data preprocessing followed including filtering and artifact minimization. A statistical analysis was performed with sLORETA/eLORETA software for each subject over a time window from 3minutes before to 1720minutes after scopolamine injection. Results show, that in the BA7, the precuneus, on both hemispheres suffered a -2 activity decrease in absolute power. The identified brain cortex center is an important hub with high connectivity and centrality values within the neural network. It contributes to the control of movement and to space orientation. Therefore, an activity alteration in this area can possibly explain the antiemetic effect of scopolamine and open a window to understand the origin of motion sickness.

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