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RATIONALE: Animal and human evidence implicate the central noradrenergic system in the process of memory modulation for emotional material. Blockade of the beta-adrenergic system in humans has been shown to result in decreased recall and recognition memory performance, relative to placebo, for the emotional elements of a series of slides accompanied by a narrative. Stimulation of the noradrenergic system with yohimbine has also been shown to result in increased recall and recognition performance relative to placebo for the same stimulus materials. OBJECTIVES: The present study tested the hypothesis that stimulating the central noradrenergic system using the new noradrenaline re-uptake inhibitor reboxetine would result in a dose-dependent enhancement of memory for emotional material in man. METHODS: The central noradrenergic system was manipulated using reboxetine in a double-blind, randomised between-group, placebo-controlled design with 36 healthy adult subjects in each of three groups (placebo, 4 and 8 mg reboxetine). Free recall and recognition memory performance were assessed in a 'surprise' memory test following a 7-day interval. RESULTS: We found no memory enhancing effect of reboxetine. In contrast we observed a dose-dependent effect on memory opposite to the predicted direction. There were no significant differences between groups in self-rated stress and arousal scores or self-rated emotional reactions to the stimuli. All groups showed the expected increased memory performance for the middle 'emotive' phase of the story. CONCLUSION: Selective stimulation of the central noradrenergic system at encoding did not result in enhanced long-term memory for emotional material in man.

Original publication

DOI

10.1007/s00213-001-0924-y

Type

Journal article

Journal

Psychopharmacology (Berl)

Publication Date

01/2002

Volume

159

Pages

311 - 318

Keywords

Adrenergic Uptake Inhibitors, Adult, Analysis of Variance, Blood Pressure, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Double-Blind Method, Female, Heart Rate, Humans, Memory, Mental Recall, Morpholines, Norepinephrine, Reboxetine, Recognition, Psychology