Journal
BEHAVIOURAL BRAIN RESEARCH
Volume 292, Issue -, Pages 443-447Publisher
ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.bbr.2015.06.037
Keywords
Acetylcholine; Donepezil; Scopolamine; Contrast perception; Alzheimer
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Funding
- Regional Council
- Ministry of Research (program DN2 M)
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We assessed the effects of donepezil, a drug that stimulates cholinergic transmission, and scopolamine, an antagonist of cholinergic transmission, on contrast sensitivity. 30 young male participants were tested under three treatment conditions: placebo, donepezil, and scopolamine in a random order. Pairs of photographs varying in contrast were displayed left and right of fixation for 50 ms. Participants were asked to locate the scene containing an animal. Accuracy was better under donepezil than under scopolamine, particularly for signals of high intensity (at higher levels of contrast). A control experiment showed that the lower performance under scopolamine did not result from the mydriasis induced by scopolamine. The results suggest that cholinergic stimulation, through donepezil, facilitates signal detection in agreement with studies on animals showing that the pharmacological activation of cholinergic receptors controls the gain in the relationship between the stimulus contrast (intensity of the visual input) and visual response. As Alzheimer disease is associated to depletion in acetylcholine, and there is evidence of deficits in contrast sensitivity in Alzheimer, it might be interesting to integrate such rapid and sensitive visual tasks in the biomarkers at early stage of drug development. (C) 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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