Fitten_1999_J.Neuropsychiatry.Clin.Neurosci_11_79

Reference

Title : Reduction of motoric agitation and restlessness by AF102B and tacrine in the macaque - Fitten_1999_J.Neuropsychiatry.Clin.Neurosci_11_79
Author(s) : Fitten LJ , Ortiz F , Siembieda DW , O'Neill J , Halgren E , Fisher A
Ref : J Neuropsychiatry Clin Neurosci , 11 :79 , 1999
Abstract :

The cholinesterase inhibitor tacrine (THA) and the M1 muscarinic agonist AF102B (cevimeline), both reported to enhance cognition in animals and humans, were tested in 5 macaques for reduction of spontaneous, random movements. Monkeys were videotaped 1 hour after administration of normal saline vehicle, after low- and high-dose intramuscular AF102B, and after low- and high-dose oral THA. Two independent blind judges counted numbers of spontaneous movements made by each monkey over 12 consecutive 15-second segments for each drug condition. Both THA and AF102B reduced movement significantly at high doses without overt side effects, warranting further research on the agitation-reducing potential of cognition-enhancing cholinomimetic drugs.

PubMedSearch : Fitten_1999_J.Neuropsychiatry.Clin.Neurosci_11_79
PubMedID: 9990560

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Citations formats

Fitten LJ, Ortiz F, Siembieda DW, O'Neill J, Halgren E, Fisher A (1999)
Reduction of motoric agitation and restlessness by AF102B and tacrine in the macaque
J Neuropsychiatry Clin Neurosci 11 :79

Fitten LJ, Ortiz F, Siembieda DW, O'Neill J, Halgren E, Fisher A (1999)
J Neuropsychiatry Clin Neurosci 11 :79