Neuroimage. 2002 Jan;15(1):153-8 doi: 10.1006/nimg.2001.0956.

Aging and cholinergic modulation of the transient magnetic 40-Hz auditory response

Ahveninen J, Jääskeläinen IP, Kaakkola S, Tiitinen H, Pekkonen E.

Abstract

Cholinergic blockade by scopolamine, a central muscarinic receptor antagonist, may produce transient memory impairment in healthy subjects, and it has been used as a neurochemical model of cognitive degeneration in aged individuals. To observe the muscarinic modulation of memory and cortical auditory processing, nine cognitively intact elderly subjects (59-80 years) were studied using neuropsychological tests and 122-channel magnetoencephalography (MEG) after an administration of scopolamine hydrobromide (0.3 mg, i.v.) or glycopyrrolate (0.2 mg, i.v.), a peripheral muscarinic antagonist. A double-blind randomized crossover design was used in two sessions separated by at least 1 week. Scopolamine, but not glycopyrrolate, produced a transient impairment of verbal memory performance in the elderly subjects. MEG indicated that the auditory-evoked 40-Hz magnetic response was significantly larger after scopolamine than after glycopyrrolate administration. Furthermore, reanalysis of our earlier results in younger subjects (20-31 years), basically supporting the present MEG findings, tentatively suggests that the scopolamine effects on the 40-Hz response may be slightly pronounced with aging. In sum, the transient magnetic 40-Hz auditory response may be useful in studies on brain cholinergic deficits in elderly subjects.

PMID: 11771983