Neuroreport
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Noradrenergic modulation of cognitive flexibility in problem solving.
Stress causes impaired performance on tests of creativity. Drugs that block beta-adrenergic receptors improve test performance in patients with test anxiety. Furthermore, catecholamine precursors (L-DOPA) reduce the flexibility of semantic networks. ⋯ Eighteen normal subjects undertook three problem solving tasks (number series, shape manipulation and anagrams) 45 min after propranolol, placebo and ephedrine. On the task that appeared to rely most heavily on cognitive flexibility (anagrams), subjects who were most able to solve these problems demonstrated significantly shorter solution times (logarithmic scores) after propranolol than after ephedrine. This suggested that the noradrenergic system exerts a modulatory effect on cognitive flexibility in problem solving.
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The possibility that ectopic purinergic sensitivity develops following peripheral nerve injury was investigated in chronic constriction injury (CCI). Spontaneous firing of A-fibers originated from the injury site or from sensory endings of afferents in the contralateral sciatic nerve. ⋯ Neither the alpha-adrenoreceptor antagonist phentolamine nor the cyclooxygenase inhibitor indomethacin attenuated the ATP-evoked effect. We conclude that a novel ectopic purinergic sensitivity mediated by P2 receptors develops at sites of the CCI of nerves in the rat, which may contribute to neuropathic pain.