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Comparison of pramipexole and modafinil on arousal, autonomic, and endocrine functions in healthy volunteers

Comparison of pramipexole and modafinil on arousal, autonomic, and endocrine functions in healthy volunteers
Comparison of pramipexole and modafinil on arousal, autonomic, and endocrine functions in healthy volunteers
The noradrenergic locus coeruleus is a major wakefulness-promoting nucleus of the brain, which is also involved in the regulation of autonomic and endocrine functions. The activity of the locus coeruleus is believed to be tonically enhanced by a mesocoerulear dopaminergic pathway arising from the ventral tegmental area of the midbrain. Both modafinil, a wakefulness-promoting drug, and pramipexole, a D(2)/D(3)receptor agonist with sedative properties, may act on this pathway, with modafinil increasing and pramipexole decreasing locus coeruleus activity. The aim of this study was to compare the two drugs on alertness, autonomic and endocrine functions in healthy volunteers. Pramipexole (0.5mg), modafinil (200mg), and their combination were administered to 16 healthy males in a double-blind, placebo-controlled design. Methods included tests of alertness (pupillographic sleepiness test, critical flicker fusion frequency, visual analogue scales), autonomic functions (resting pupil diameter, light and darkness reflex responses, heart rate, blood pressure, salivation, core temperature), and endocrine functions (blood concentrations of prolactin, growth hormone, and thyroid stimulating hormone). Data were analysed by ANOVA. Pramipexole reduced alertness, caused pupil dilatation, increased heart rate, reduced prolactin and thyroid stimulating hormone, and increased growth hormone level. Modafinil caused small increases in blood pressure and core temperature, and reduced prolactin levels. The sedative effect of pramipexole and the autonomic effects of modafinil are consistent with altered activity in the mesocoerulear pathway; the pupil dilatation following pramipexole suggests reduced dopaminergic excitation of the Edinger-Westphal nucleus.
darkness, human, autonomic nervous system, psychiatry, dopamine agonists, comparison, heart rate, drug effects, endocrine system, adolescent, central nervous system stimulants
0269-8811
756-770
Samuels, E.R.
be1fd344-e73a-43da-aca8-33c6e21cb7f2
Hou, R.H.
470bdcbc-93a9-4dad-aac5-26d455c34376
Langley, R.W.
579cc42e-972f-4422-952f-1c76ecc4b4e3
Szabadi, E.
cff688f8-264f-4ca3-a2c4-cb10930f1956
Bradshaw, C.M.
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Samuels, E.R.
be1fd344-e73a-43da-aca8-33c6e21cb7f2
Hou, R.H.
470bdcbc-93a9-4dad-aac5-26d455c34376
Langley, R.W.
579cc42e-972f-4422-952f-1c76ecc4b4e3
Szabadi, E.
cff688f8-264f-4ca3-a2c4-cb10930f1956
Bradshaw, C.M.
0baafd10-0e91-4113-b90b-27132bd77305

Samuels, E.R., Hou, R.H., Langley, R.W., Szabadi, E. and Bradshaw, C.M. (2006) Comparison of pramipexole and modafinil on arousal, autonomic, and endocrine functions in healthy volunteers. Journal of Psychopharmacology, 20 (6), 756-770. (doi:10.1177/0269881106060770).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The noradrenergic locus coeruleus is a major wakefulness-promoting nucleus of the brain, which is also involved in the regulation of autonomic and endocrine functions. The activity of the locus coeruleus is believed to be tonically enhanced by a mesocoerulear dopaminergic pathway arising from the ventral tegmental area of the midbrain. Both modafinil, a wakefulness-promoting drug, and pramipexole, a D(2)/D(3)receptor agonist with sedative properties, may act on this pathway, with modafinil increasing and pramipexole decreasing locus coeruleus activity. The aim of this study was to compare the two drugs on alertness, autonomic and endocrine functions in healthy volunteers. Pramipexole (0.5mg), modafinil (200mg), and their combination were administered to 16 healthy males in a double-blind, placebo-controlled design. Methods included tests of alertness (pupillographic sleepiness test, critical flicker fusion frequency, visual analogue scales), autonomic functions (resting pupil diameter, light and darkness reflex responses, heart rate, blood pressure, salivation, core temperature), and endocrine functions (blood concentrations of prolactin, growth hormone, and thyroid stimulating hormone). Data were analysed by ANOVA. Pramipexole reduced alertness, caused pupil dilatation, increased heart rate, reduced prolactin and thyroid stimulating hormone, and increased growth hormone level. Modafinil caused small increases in blood pressure and core temperature, and reduced prolactin levels. The sedative effect of pramipexole and the autonomic effects of modafinil are consistent with altered activity in the mesocoerulear pathway; the pupil dilatation following pramipexole suggests reduced dopaminergic excitation of the Edinger-Westphal nucleus.

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More information

Published date: 1 November 2006
Keywords: darkness, human, autonomic nervous system, psychiatry, dopamine agonists, comparison, heart rate, drug effects, endocrine system, adolescent, central nervous system stimulants

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 62564
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/62564
ISSN: 0269-8811
PURE UUID: ef0d6f9b-06bf-403e-a891-7711710b9e4e
ORCID for R.H. Hou: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-6127-1478

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Date deposited: 12 Sep 2008
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 03:55

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Contributors

Author: E.R. Samuels
Author: R.H. Hou ORCID iD
Author: R.W. Langley
Author: E. Szabadi
Author: C.M. Bradshaw

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