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Journal of Psychopharmacology
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Effects of chlormethiazole on psychological performance under conditions of constant plasma concentrations

D. Fagan

Department of Anaesthetics, Royal Infirmary, Edinburgh EH3 9YW, UK

D.B. Scott

Department of Anaesthetics, Royal Infirmary, Edinburgh EH3 9YW, UK

B. Tiplady

Department of Anaesthetics, Royal Infirmary, Edinburgh EH3 9YW, UK

Chlormethiazole was administered intravenously to six healthy volunteers (four male, two female, aged 20-33 years) using a loading dose followed by a maintenance infusion lasting ~ 90 min. Doses were individually calculated from previous pharmacokinetic investigations in these subjects to produce a target steady-state plasma concentration of 1.5 µg ml-1. Effects of chlormethiazole were determined using a short battery consisting of digit-symbol substitution, body sway and visual analogue scales, which was performed repeatedly before, during and after the active infusion. A more comprehensive battery of performance tests was performed once before and once during the active infusion. The mean plasma concentration of chlormethiazole obtained was 1.33 µg ml-1. This produced marked sedation, with subjects scoring themselves as much more drowsy on chlormethiazole than on placebo, and global impairment to performance. An analysis of the slopes of scores on the performance tests in the short battery showed no evidence of a diminution of the effects of chlormethiazole over the infusion period. The same was true of the majority of the visual analogue scales, but two scales, rating eye symptoms and nose symptoms, did decline over the period of the infusion. Recovery was rapid, subjects returning to approximately baseline levels of performance within 30 min of discontinuation of the infusion. These results suggest that acute tolerance to the CNS effects of chlormethiazole does not occur over this time scale, but is found for peripheral effects such as eye and nose symptoms.

Key Words: chlormethiazole • steady-state • psychological performance

Journal of Psychopharmacology, Vol. 8, No. 3, 164-167 (1994)
DOI: 10.1177/026988119400800304


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