Rationale: Two rat auditory evoked potential (AEP) components P13 and N40 are suggested as analogues to the human P50, which has abnormal suppression properties in schizophrenia. However, P50 likely reflects neural activity from several different brain areas. Studies examining each of these components in the rat model have proposed circuitry that involves alpha2 norepinephrine (NE) receptors, and different disruption effects are predicted depending on whether effects are presynaptic or postsynaptic.
Objectives: The aim of this paper is to test differential effects of NE antagonism on disruption of normal P13 and N40 expression.
Materials And Methods: AEPs were recorded simultaneously in alert, freely moving rats using the alpha2 antagonist yohimbine. Amplitudes of P13 and N40 elicited by 500-ms interstimulus interval click pairs were measured after administration of a placebo and three doses of the yohimbine.
Results: A high dose of yohimbine yielded smaller P13 amplitudes to both clicks, consistent with presynaptic action. However, a moderate yohimbine dose yielded increased P13 amplitudes to both clicks. For N40, a moderate dose of yohimbine yielded increased amplitudes to the second stimulus, and a high dose restored normal suppression, which is consistent with previously reported findings.
Conclusions: This study demonstrated that noradrenergic activity differentially affects P13 and N40 components. As P13 and N40 are each models of human P50, these findings highlight the complex circuitry that likely underlies P50. An appreciation for these complexities is critical for understanding the mechanisms of the P50 suppression deficit in schizophrenia, which may be influenced by both trait and state factors.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00213-006-0608-8 | DOI Listing |
J Assoc Res Otolaryngol
August 2016
Department of Neurology, Ruprecht-Karls-Universität Heidelberg, Heidelberg, Germany.
We used magnetoencephalography to examine lateralization and binaural interaction of the middle-latency and late-brainstem components of the auditory evoked response (the MLR and SN10, respectively). Click stimuli were presented either monaurally, or binaurally with left- or right-leading interaural time differences (ITDs). While early MLR components, including the N19 and P30, were larger for monaural stimuli presented contralaterally (by approximately 30 and 36 % in the left and right hemispheres, respectively), later components, including the N40 and P50, were larger ipsilaterally.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPsychopharmacology (Berl)
January 2007
Department of Psychology, Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine and Science, North Chicago, IL 60064, USA.
Rationale: Two rat auditory evoked potential (AEP) components P13 and N40 are suggested as analogues to the human P50, which has abnormal suppression properties in schizophrenia. However, P50 likely reflects neural activity from several different brain areas. Studies examining each of these components in the rat model have proposed circuitry that involves alpha2 norepinephrine (NE) receptors, and different disruption effects are predicted depending on whether effects are presynaptic or postsynaptic.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFExp Brain Res
July 2005
Center for Translational Neuroscience, Department of Neurobiology & Developmental Sciences, College of Medicine, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock, AR, 72205, USA.
We identified a potential novel site of action for nicotine (NIC) since (a) systemic injection of NIC led to a dose-dependent decrease in the amplitude of the sleep state-dependent, vertex-recorded, P13 midlatency auditory evoked potential (generated by the reticular activating system, RAS), (b) localized injections of a nicotinic receptor antagonist into the pedunculopontine nucleus (PPN, the cholinergic arm of the RAS) blocked the effects of systemic NIC on the P13 potential (a measure of level of arousal), and (c) localized injection of a nicotinic receptor agonist into the PPN also led to a decrease in the amplitude of the P13 potential, an effect blocked by PPN injection of a nicotinic receptor antagonist. There were minor changes in the manifestation of the startle response (SR) at the concentrations used; however, NIC did decrease the hippocampal N40 potential, although its effects were not affected by antagonist or agonist injections into the PPN. These results suggest a potential mechanism underlying the anxiolytic effects of NIC-suppression of the cholinergic arm of the RAS.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrain Res
March 1999
Department of Anatomy, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, 4301 W. Markham St., Little Rock, AR 72205, USA.
The human P1/P50 midlatency auditory evoked potential and the startle response (SR) have been used as measures of sensory and sensorimotor gating, respectively. In the present study, both prepulse and paired stimulus paradigms were used in order to investigate the relationship between sensory gating mechanisms of the P13 potential, the putative rodent equivalent of the P1 potential, and those of the SR. In addition, these were compared to the properties of the N40 potential, another measure of sensory gating.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActa Otolaryngol
January 1998
Laboratoire Neurosciences et Systèmes Sensoriels, Université Claude Bernard Lyon I, UPRESA 5020 Centre Hospitalier Lyon-Sud, Pierre Benite, France.
Brief intense clicks cause short-latency cervical muscles microcontractions which are supposed to be of vestibular origin. Averaging these microcontractions allows myogenic vestibular evoked potentials (MVEP) to be obtained. MVEP from the trapezius muscles were investigated in normal subjects, cochleovestibular nerve-damaged patients and patients with a vestibular or a cochlear lesion.
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