Dose-dependent effects of intravenous lorazepam on cardiovascular activity, plasma catecholamines and psychological function during rest and mental stress
Autor: | H.G. van Steenis, Peter Moleman, Frans Boomsma, Venantius van den Heuij, Joke H.M. Tulen |
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Rok vydání: | 1991 |
Předmět: |
Adult
Male Rest Sedation Hemodynamics Anxiety Lorazepam Placebo Electrocardiography Random Allocation Catecholamines Double-Blind Method mental disorders Heart rate Reaction Time medicine Humans Pharmacology Dose-Response Relationship Drug Cumulative dose Electroencephalography Affect Blood pressure Anesthesia Injections Intravenous medicine.symptom Psychology Psychomotor Performance Stress Psychological medicine.drug |
Zdroj: | Psychopharmacology. 105:77-83 |
ISSN: | 1432-2072 0033-3158 |
DOI: | 10.1007/bf02316867 |
Popis: | Dose-dependent effects of intravenously administered lorazepam on psychophysiological activity during rest and mental stress were studied in order to examine differential responses to doses which may induce anxiolysis or sedation. In a double-blind randomized cross-over study, nine male volunteers participated in a placebo and a lorazepam session, during which the subjects repeatedly performed a 10-min version of the Stroop Color Word Test (CWT), with 10 min of rest between the CWTs. Lorazepam was administered before each rest period in increasing doses of 0.0, 0.06, 0.13, 0.25 and 0.5 mg (total cumulative dose: 0.94 mg). Heart rate showed a dose-dependent decrease during rest with an ED50 of 0.13 mg lorazepam, while lorazepam had no effect on the cardiovascular and plasma catecholamine response magnitudes to the CWT. Subjective fatigue and reaction time increased significantly after 0.94 mg lorazepam, while at the same dose vigor decreased; state anxiety after the CWT was not influenced by lorazepam. These data show differential effects of lorazepam on cardiovascular, biochemical and psychological function. While heart rate was suppressed at low doses during rest and reaction time and subjective fatigue increased at doses which induced sedation, state anxiety and physiological response patterns to the CWT were not influenced by lorazepam. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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