Cocaine use and the mid-latency auditory evoked responses.

Psychiatry Res

Department of Psychiatry (116A), Yale University School of Medicine and VA Connecticut Healthcare System, 950 Campbell Avenue, 06516, West Haven, CT, USA. nash@

Published: October 2000

To examine the effects of chronic cocaine use on the mid-latency auditory evoked responses (MLAERs), we recorded the evoked responses of 15 cocaine-dependent subjects and 13 age-matched healthy control subjects. Two evoked response paradigms were used: a trains paradigm with four different inter-stimulus intervals (ISIs) and a paired-click paradigm. Our data suggest that cocaine-dependent subjects generate smaller P50 components when long ISIs are used with multiple repetitions (in the trains paradigm). In a single repetition paradigm (paired clicks), a significant decrease in the ability to attenuate the N100 component was seen in the cocaine-dependent subjects.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0165-1781(00)00207-9DOI Listing

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