• Anesthesiology · Oct 2004

    Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial

    Information loss over time defines the memory defect of propofol: a comparative response with thiopental and dexmedetomidine.

    • Robert A Veselis, Ruth A Reinsel, Vladimir A Feshchenko, and Ray Johnson.
    • Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center and Weill Medical College of Cornell University, 1275 York Avenue, New York, NY, USA.
    • Anesthesiology. 2004 Oct 1;101(4):831-41.

    BackgroundSedative-hypnotic drugs impair memory, but details regarding the nature of this effect are unknown. The influences of propofol, thiopental, and dexmedetomidine on the performance of a task that isolates specific components of episodic memory function were measured.MethodsWorking (1 intervening item, 6 s) and long-term memory (10 intervening items, 33 s) were tested using auditory words in a continuous recognition task before and during drug administration. Eighty-three volunteer participants were randomly assigned to receive a constant target concentration of drug or placebo, producing sedative effects from imperceptible to unresponsiveness. Responsive participants were categorized as high or low performers, using a median split of long-term memory performance during drug administration. Recognition of words at the end of the study day was assessed.ResultsHigh performers had acquisition of material into long-term memory when drug was present at the same level as placebo. Retention of this material at 225 min was significantly less for propofol (39 +/- 23% loss of material) than for other drugs (17-23% loss; P < 0.01). Greater sedation in low performers was evident in multiple measures. Memory for words presented before drug was no different from that associated with placebo for all groups.ConclusionsLack of retention of material acquired into long-term memory during propofol administration, associated with minimal sedation, seems to define drug-induced amnesia. Sedation seems to impair the acquisition or encoding of material into long-term memory. Therefore, the putative targets of drug-induced amnesia by propofol are processes associated with retention of material in long-term memory.

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