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Submitted on January 6, 2004
Accepted on November 23, 2004
-adrenergic and Corticosteroid Systems
Laboratory of Human Stress Research, Douglas Hospital Research Centre, Frank B. Common Pavilion, 6875 LaSalle Blvd, Montreal, Quebec, Canada, H4H 1R3.; Department of Psychology, University of Montreal; Department of Psychiatry, McGill University
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: sonia.lupien{at}mcgill.ca.
To determine the role played by the
-adrenergic and corticosteroid systems in the modulatory effects of stress on declarative memory function, 42 young men were administered either a placebo, propranolol (
-adrenergic blocker), or metyrapone (corticosteroid synthesis inhibitor) before being submitted to a psychological stress protocol. Immediately after stress, subjects viewed a neutral story, unrelated to the stressor. Short- (five minutes post-learning) and long-term (one week post-learning) recall of the story was assessed. Placebo and propranolol groups showed significant stress-related increases in corticosteroid levels, while metyrapone prevented corticosteroid reactivity to the stressor. Stress triggered significant elevations in cardiac activity (heart rate, systolic and diastolic blood pressure levels) in all three groups, with the metyrapone group showing the strongest elevation in heart rate levels in response to stress. Compared with placebo, propranolol had no effect on short- and long-term recall of the story learned after stress, while metyrapone impaired short-term recall of the story, with no further effects on long-term declarative memory. These results suggest that, contrary to the
-adrenergic system, the corticosteroid system is implicated in declarative memory function after stress in humans.
-adrenergic system
metyrapone
-blockers
humans
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