Cargando…

Differential effects of acute diazepam on emotional and neutral memory tasks in acutely hospitalized depressed patients

With the hypothesis that depression affects memory through a mechanism other than that of the benzodiazepines, the present study evaluated the acute effect of diazepam 10 mg upon explicit memory in patients with major depression. A double-blind, placebo (starch 50 mg) controlled experiment was carri...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Delgado, Vera B, Izquierdo, Ivan, Chaves, Márcia LF
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Dove Medical Press 2005
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2416758/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18568105
_version_ 1782156077246185472
author Delgado, Vera B
Izquierdo, Ivan
Chaves, Márcia LF
author_facet Delgado, Vera B
Izquierdo, Ivan
Chaves, Márcia LF
author_sort Delgado, Vera B
collection PubMed
description With the hypothesis that depression affects memory through a mechanism other than that of the benzodiazepines, the present study evaluated the acute effect of diazepam 10 mg upon explicit memory in patients with major depression. A double-blind, placebo (starch 50 mg) controlled experiment was carried out with 19 patients randomly divided into diazepam (n = 10) and placebo (n = 9) groups. They were evaluated by the Mini-Mental State Examination, and tests were conducted for immediate and delayed (short-term) memory with emotionally toned stimuli (negative, positive, neutral), recognition, and semantic memory in visual or auditory modality. The Visual Analog Mood scale (VAMS) was applied to measure anxiety and mood changes after the administration of drugs (30 minutes and 6 hours). Higher scores in the positively toned list among patients who received diazepam were observed, at the 30-minute compared with the 6-hour evaluation. The recall index of positive words in the diazepam group was positive and significantly different from the index of the placebo group. No anterograde amnesia following diazepam was observed. The neural model of a dysfunction of limbic prefrontal cortical structures that impairs the modulation of the amygdala in major depression may explain the present results. Consequently, the action of diazepam on the amygdala, which has been proposed to be the basis of its anxiolytic action, might be altered, modifying the modulation of memory in our patients.
format Text
id pubmed-2416758
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2005
publisher Dove Medical Press
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-24167582008-06-20 Differential effects of acute diazepam on emotional and neutral memory tasks in acutely hospitalized depressed patients Delgado, Vera B Izquierdo, Ivan Chaves, Márcia LF Neuropsychiatr Dis Treat Original Research With the hypothesis that depression affects memory through a mechanism other than that of the benzodiazepines, the present study evaluated the acute effect of diazepam 10 mg upon explicit memory in patients with major depression. A double-blind, placebo (starch 50 mg) controlled experiment was carried out with 19 patients randomly divided into diazepam (n = 10) and placebo (n = 9) groups. They were evaluated by the Mini-Mental State Examination, and tests were conducted for immediate and delayed (short-term) memory with emotionally toned stimuli (negative, positive, neutral), recognition, and semantic memory in visual or auditory modality. The Visual Analog Mood scale (VAMS) was applied to measure anxiety and mood changes after the administration of drugs (30 minutes and 6 hours). Higher scores in the positively toned list among patients who received diazepam were observed, at the 30-minute compared with the 6-hour evaluation. The recall index of positive words in the diazepam group was positive and significantly different from the index of the placebo group. No anterograde amnesia following diazepam was observed. The neural model of a dysfunction of limbic prefrontal cortical structures that impairs the modulation of the amygdala in major depression may explain the present results. Consequently, the action of diazepam on the amygdala, which has been proposed to be the basis of its anxiolytic action, might be altered, modifying the modulation of memory in our patients. Dove Medical Press 2005-09 /pmc/articles/PMC2416758/ /pubmed/18568105 Text en © 2005 Dove Medical Press Limited. All rights reserved
spellingShingle Original Research
Delgado, Vera B
Izquierdo, Ivan
Chaves, Márcia LF
Differential effects of acute diazepam on emotional and neutral memory tasks in acutely hospitalized depressed patients
title Differential effects of acute diazepam on emotional and neutral memory tasks in acutely hospitalized depressed patients
title_full Differential effects of acute diazepam on emotional and neutral memory tasks in acutely hospitalized depressed patients
title_fullStr Differential effects of acute diazepam on emotional and neutral memory tasks in acutely hospitalized depressed patients
title_full_unstemmed Differential effects of acute diazepam on emotional and neutral memory tasks in acutely hospitalized depressed patients
title_short Differential effects of acute diazepam on emotional and neutral memory tasks in acutely hospitalized depressed patients
title_sort differential effects of acute diazepam on emotional and neutral memory tasks in acutely hospitalized depressed patients
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2416758/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18568105
work_keys_str_mv AT delgadoverab differentialeffectsofacutediazepamonemotionalandneutralmemorytasksinacutelyhospitalizeddepressedpatients
AT izquierdoivan differentialeffectsofacutediazepamonemotionalandneutralmemorytasksinacutelyhospitalizeddepressedpatients
AT chavesmarcialf differentialeffectsofacutediazepamonemotionalandneutralmemorytasksinacutelyhospitalizeddepressedpatients