9 research outputs found
Acute Modulation of Aged Human Memory by Pharmacological Manipulation of Glucocorticoids
In a previous longitudinal study of basal cortisol levels and
cognitive function in humans, we showed that elderly humans
with 4- to 7-yr cumulative exposure to high levels of cortisol
present memory impairments, compared with elderly humans
with moderate cortisol levels over years. Here, we measured
whether memory performance in two groups of elderly humans
separated on the basis of their cortisol history over a
5-yr period could be modulated by a hormone-replacement
protocol in which we inhibited cortisol secretion by the administration
of metyrapone and then restored baseline cortisol
levels by infusion of hydrocortisone. We showed that in
elderly subjects with a 5-yr history of moderate cortisol levels
(n 8), metyrapone treatment significantly impaired memory
performance, a deficit that was reversed following hydrocortisone
replacement. In the elderly subjects with a 5-yr history
of high cortisol levels and current memory deficits (n 9),
metyrapone treatment did not have any significant effect on
memory performance, but hydrocortisone treatment significantly
decreased delayed memory. These results suggest that
memory function in elderly humans can be intensely modulated
by pharmacological manipulation of glucocorticoids, although
the direction of these effects depends on the cortisol
history of each individual