66 research outputs found

    Disagreements with implications: diverging discourses on the ethics of non-medical use of methylphenidate for performance enhancement

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>There is substantial evidence that methylphenidate (MPH; Ritalin), is being used by healthy university students for non-medical motives such as the improvement of concentration, alertness, and academic performance. The scope and potential consequences of the non-medical use of MPH upon healthcare and society bring about many points of view.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>To gain insight into key ethical and social issues on the non-medical use of MPH, we examined discourses in the print media, bioethics literature, and public health literature.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Our study identified three diverging paradigms with varying perspectives on the nature of performance enhancement. The beneficial effects of MPH on normal cognition were generally portrayed enthusiastically in the print media and bioethics discourses but supported by scant information on associated risks. Overall, we found a variety of perspectives regarding ethical, legal and social issues related to the non-medical use of MPH for performance enhancement and its impact upon social practices and institutions. The exception to this was public health discourse which took a strong stance against the non-medical use of MPH typically viewed as a form of prescription abuse or misuse. Wide-ranging recommendations for prevention of further non-medical use of MPH included legislation and increased public education.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Some positive portrayals of the non-medical use of MPH for performance enhancement in the print media and bioethics discourses could entice further uses. Medicine and society need to prepare for more prevalent non-medical uses of neuropharmaceuticals by fostering better informed public debates.</p

    Evaluating the drivers of and obstacles to the willingness to use cognitive enhancement drugs: the influence of drug characteristics, social environment, and personal characteristics

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    Sattler S, Mehlkop G, Graeff P, Sauer C. Evaluating the drivers of and obstacles to the willingness to use cognitive enhancement drugs: the influence of drug characteristics, social environment, and personal characteristics. Substance Abuse Treatment, Prevention, and Policy. 2014;9(1): 8.Background The use of cognitive enhancement (CE) by means of pharmaceutical agents has been the subject of intense debate both among scientists and in the media. This study investigates several drivers of and obstacles to the willingness to use prescription drugs non-medically for augmenting brain capacity. Methods We conducted a web-based study among 2,877 students from randomly selected disciplines at German universities. Using a factorial survey, respondents expressed their willingness to take various hypothetical CE-drugs; the drugs were described by five experimentally varied characteristics and the social environment by three varied characteristics. Personal characteristics and demographic controls were also measured. Results We found that 65.3% of the respondents staunchly refused to use CE-drugs. The results of a multivariate negative binomial regression indicated that respondents’ willingness to use CE-drugs increased if the potential drugs promised a significant augmentation of mental capacity and a high probability of achieving this augmentation. Willingness decreased when there was a high probability of side effects and a high price. Prevalent CE-drug use among peers increased willingness, whereas a social environment that strongly disapproved of these drugs decreased it. Regarding the respondents’ characteristics, pronounced academic procrastination, high cognitive test anxiety, low intrinsic motivation, low internalization of social norms against CE-drug use, and past experiences with CE-drugs increased willingness. The potential severity of side effects, social recommendations about using CE-drugs, risk preferences, and competencies had no measured effects upon willingness. Conclusions These findings contribute to understanding factors that influence the willingness to use CE-drugs. They support the assumption of instrumental drug use and may contribute to the development of prevention, policy, and educational strategies

    The evidence for hippocampal long-term potentiation as a basis of memory for simple tasks

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    Effects of training procedure on memory formation using a weak passive avoidance learning paradigm

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    One-day-old chicks will learn, in one trial, to avoid pecking a bead that tastes aversive. This procedure is used widely as a model for learning and memory, although a variety of training procedures and bead types are used in different laboratories. Here we report that the decay of memory following training on a weak (10% methylanthranilate) avoidance task is dependent on the training procedure rather than the characteristics of the beads or the strain of chick used. Chicks that have been presented with a bead in pretraining and a similar bead coated in MeA during training fail to avoid the bead when tested 2 h posttraining, whereas chicks presented with a bead of particular color and size for the first time at training demonstrate high levels of avoidance at 2 h posttraining. These results resolve the differences in the time course of memory formation for a weak passive avoidance task described by the groups at Monash University (Crowe, Ng, & Gibbs, 1989) and the Open University (Sandi & Rose, 1994). (C) 1997 Academic Press

    Role of BDNF in memory retention, not acquisition

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    Isolation-stress-induced facilitation of passive avoidance memory in the day-old chick

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    This study showed that facilitation of recall of a weak version of the 1-trial passive avoidance learning task could be achieved by behavioral "stressing" of day-old chicks after training. Recall, usually retained for less than 9 hr, was extended by socially isolating the chicks for 1 hr immediately after training. There was a brief 3-fold increase in plasma corticosterone levels 10 min after isolation. Facilitated recall was not evident when chicks were isolated 2 hr after training, and it was blocked by intracerebral administration of 2-ng RU 38486, a specific glucocorticoid receptor antagonist, per chick. Male chicks responded more to isolation than did female chicks, presumably a consequence of the additional stress of the injection procedure

    Role of BDNF but not NGF, in memory formation

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    Memory consolidation in day-old chicks requires BDNF but not NGF or NT-3; an antisense study

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    Neurotrophins have been implicated in memory consolidation and recall as well as in other forms of neural plasticity. This study examined the effects of Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor (BDNF), Nerve Growth Factor (NGF) and Neurotrophin-3 (NT-3) on consolidation of memory for a one-trial passive avoidance task in day-old chicks. In this task chicks, having pecked once at a bitter tasting bead, avoid a similar but dry bead subsequently. Intracerebral administration of antisense ODNs to BDNF 6-12 h prior to training induced amnesia for the avoidance response by 3 h after training. Administration of a 'control' scrambled sequence or saline had no effect on recall, chicks continued to avoid the bead. Treatment with BDNF-AS did not inhibit shorter-term recall; amnesia was not present 1 h after training, but prevented longer-term recall, as amnesia was still present 24 h after training. Treatment with BDNF-antisense reduced both BDNF mRNA and BDNF protein in the chick brain, but did not alter mRNA levels of glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase. By contrast, no effect of antisense to NGF or NT-3 on behaviour was observed, even though administration reduced the mRNA for each. There were no significant effects of any antisense on other behavioural measures at the doses used. Thus we conclude that BDNF has a specific role in memory consolidation for the passive avoidance task. (C) 2001 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved

    Long-term memory for a spatial task in young chicks

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