Correlation Engine 2.0
Clear Search sequence regions


  • amnesia (9)
  • diazepam (6)
  • humans (1)
  • impaired (2)
  • memory (4)
  • memory short- term (1)
  • patients (1)
  • placebo (1)
  • Sizes of these terms reflect their relevance to your search.

    Acute administration of benzodiazepines is considered a pharmacological model of general organic anterograde amnesias (OAA). We sought to determine which type of amnesia these drugs best model by comparing the effects of diazepam with those reported in amnesiacs regarding working memory capacity (WMC), susceptibility to retroactive interference (RI), and accelerated forgetting. In this double-blind, parallel-group design study, 30 undergraduates were randomly allocated to acute oral treatments with 15 mg diazepam or placebo. WMC and story recall were assessed pre- and post-treatment. Story presentation was succeeded by 10 min of RI (spotting differences in pictures) or minimal RI (doing nothing in a darkened room). Delayed story recall was assessed under diazepam and 7 days later in a drug-free session to assess accelerated forgetting. Recall of stories encoded under diazepam, whether reactivated or not, was severely impaired (anterograde amnesia). However, diazepam did not impair WMC, increase susceptibility to RI, or accelerate forgetting. Diazepam's amnestic effects mirror those in patients with probable severe medial temporal damage, mostly restricted to initial consolidation and differ from other OAA (Korsakoff syndrome, frontal, transient epileptic, posttraumatic amnesia, and most progressive amnesias) in terms of WMC, susceptibility to RI and accelerated forgetting. © 2020 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

    Citation

    Isis Angélica Segura, Jamie McGhee, Sergio Della Sala, Nelson Cowan, Sabine Pompéia. A reappraisal of acute doses of benzodiazepines as a model of anterograde amnesia. Human psychopharmacology. 2021 May;36(3):e2774

    Expand section icon Mesh Tags

    Expand section icon Substances


    PMID: 33368617

    View Full Text