Caffeine attenuates scopolamine-induced
memory impairment in humans
by
Riedel W, Hogervorst E, Leboux R,
Verhey F, van Praag H, Jolles J.
Department of Psychiatry and Neurophysiology,
University of Limburg, Maastricht, Netherlands.
Psychopharmacology (Berl) 1995 Nov;122(2):158-68
ABSTRACT
Caffeine consumption can be beneficial for cognitive functioning. Although caffeine is widely recognized as a mild CNS stimulant drug, the most important consequence of its adenosine antagonism is cholinergic stimulation, which might lead to improvement of higher cognitive functions, particularly memory. In this study, the scopolamine model of amnesia was used to test the cholinergic effects of caffeine, administered as three cups of coffee. Subjects were 16 healthy volunteers who received 250 mg caffeine and 2 mg nicotine separately, in a placebo-controlled double-blind cross-over design. Compared to placebo, nicotine attenuated the scopolamine-induced impairment of storage in short-term memory and attenuated the scopolamine-induced slowing of speed of short-term memory scanning. Nicotine also attenuated the scopolamine-induced slowing of reaction time in a response competition task. Caffeine attenuated the scopolamine-induced impairment of free recall from short- and long-term memory, quality and speed of retrieval from long-term memory in a word learning task, and other cognitive and non-cognitive measures, such as perceptual sensitivity in visual search, reading speed, and rate of finger-tapping. On the basis of these results it was concluded that caffeine possesses cholinergic cognition enhancing properties. Caffeine could be used as a control drug in studies using the scopolamine paradigm and possibly also in other experimental studies of cognitive enhancers, as the effects of a newly developed cognition enhancing drug should at least be superior to the effects of three cups of coffee.
Coffee
Caffeine
Exercise
Guarana
Ampakines
Blueberries
New brain cells
Centrophenoxine
Caffeine and alcohol
The memory switch?
Dumb-drug euphoria
Growing new brain cells
Coffee and caffeine FAQ
Caffeine and noradrenaline
Light, nondependent caffeine users
MAO inhibition in human coffee drinkers
Is antioxidant-rich coffee a health drink?
Coffee, caffeine and Parkinson's disease
Coffee, caffeine, pyroglutamate and memory
Caffeine, acetylcholine and the hippocampus
Caffeine/aspirin combo: effects on mood and performance
Is caffeine use protective against cognitive impairment in Alzheimer's?
Refs
HOME
HedWeb
Future Opioids
BLTC Research
Utopian Pharmacology
SMART DRUGS 2: review
The Hedonistic Imperative
Critique of Huxley's Brave New World

The Good Drug Guide
The Responsible Parent's Guide
To Healthy Mood Boosters For All The Family