A single high dose of escitalopram disrupts sensory gating and habituation, but
not sensorimotor gating in healthy volunteers.
Author(s): Oranje B, Wienberg M, Glenthoj BY.
Affiliation(s): Copenhagen University, University Psychiatric Center Glostrup, Denmark.
B.Oranje@cnsr.dk
Publication date & source: 2011, Psychiatry Res. , 186(2-3):431-6
Early mechanisms to limit the input of sensory information to higher brain areas
are important for a healthy individual. In previous studies, we found that a low
dose of 10mg escitalopram (SSRI) disrupts habituation, without affecting sensory
and sensorimotor gating in healthy volunteers. In the current study a higher dose
of 15 mg was used. The hypothesis was that this higher dose of escitalopram would
not only disrupt habituation, but also sensory and sensorimotor gating. Twenty
healthy male volunteers received either placebo or 15 mg escitalopram, after
which they were tested in a P50 suppression, and a habituation and prepulse
inhibition (PPI) of the startle reflex paradigm. Escitalopram significantly
decreased P50 suppression and habituation, but had no effect on PPI. The results
indicate that habituation and sensory gating are disrupted by increased
serotonergic activity, while sensorimotor gating seems relatively insensitive to
such a rise. Since the patients who are frequently treated with SSRIs (patients
with schizophrenia and affective disorders) might already suffer from disrupted
sensory gating and habituation, the current results call for caution in the
determination of a proper dose.
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