Title of article :
Improved event-related potential signs of selective attention after the administration of the cholecystokinin analog ceruletide in healthy persons
Author/Authors :
Herbert Schreiber، نويسنده , , Gisela Stolz-Born، نويسنده , , Reinhard Pietrowsky، نويسنده , , Hans Helmut Kornhuber، نويسنده , , Horst-Lorenz Fehm، نويسنده , , Jan Born، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1995
Abstract :
Cholecystokinin (CCK) is co-localized with dopamine (DA) in neurons of the mesolimbic-frontocortical dopamine (DA) system, considered essential for the pathology of psychotic behavior and associated attention deficits. The present experiments in 13 healthy men aimed at examining the effects of the CCK analog ceruletide on attention as reflected by event-related brain potentials (ERPs). Subjects were tested according to a double-blind cross-over design on three occasions, following intravenous infusion of placebo, 0.5 μg ceruletide, and 2.5 μg ceruletide. ERPs were recorded during the subjectʹs performance on an auditory selective attention task including the concurrent presentation of frequent standard tones and infrequent deviant tones which the subject had to listen to, or to ignore. The processing negativity (PN) over frontocentral cortical areas, reflecting selective attention, was higher after ceruletide than placebo, this increase being most pronounced after the 2.5 μg dose (placebo −1.29 ± 0.38 μV versus ceruletide −3.02 ± 0.65 μV, p< .05). ERP signs of a general increase in cortical arousal after ceruletide did not reach significance. Likewise, mismatch negativity, an indicator of preattentive processing of stimulus deviance, was not significantly affected by the peptide. The results indicate that ceruletide affects human brain function primarily by improving selective attention
Keywords :
Growth hormone , cortisol , Cholecystokinin , Selective attention , Event-related potential , Processing negativity , Mismatch negativity , P3 , blood pressure
Journal title :
Biological Psychiatry
Journal title :
Biological Psychiatry