ACETYLCHOLINE AND HALLUCINATIONS - DISEASE-RELATED COMPARED TO DRUG-INDUCED ALTERATIONS IN HUMAN CONSCIOUSNESS

Authors
Citation
Ek. Perry et Rh. Perry, ACETYLCHOLINE AND HALLUCINATIONS - DISEASE-RELATED COMPARED TO DRUG-INDUCED ALTERATIONS IN HUMAN CONSCIOUSNESS, Brain and cognition, 28(3), 1995, pp. 240-258
Citations number
65
Categorie Soggetti
Psychology, Experimental",Neurosciences
Journal title
ISSN journal
02782626
Volume
28
Issue
3
Year of publication
1995
Pages
240 - 258
Database
ISI
SICI code
0278-2626(1995)28:3<240:AAH-DC>2.0.ZU;2-3
Abstract
Newly proposed criteria for Lewy body dementia include alterations in consciousness. Lewy body dementia is also associated with a disturbanc e in cholinergic transmission; neocortical cholinergic deficits in thi s disorder are more extensive than in Alzheimer's disease and are corr elated with symptoms commonly associated with delirium, such as visual hallucinations. The traditional view that derangements of the basal f orebrain cholinergic system in Alzheimer's disease relate specifically to memory impairment is assessed in terms of a more general role for cortical acetylcholine in consciousness. This extends the concept that cortical acetylcholine enhances neuronal signal to noise ratio. It is suggested that muscarinic receptor activation in the cortex is involv ed in confining the contents of the discrete self-reported conscious ' 'stream.'' In the absence of cortical acetylcholine, currently irrelev ant intrinsic and sensory information, which is constantly processed i n parallel at the subconscious level, enters conscious awareness. This is consistent with the ability of anti-muscarinic drugs administered medically, recreationally, or ritualistically to induce visual halluci nations and other perceptual disturbances. The hypothesis is explored through comparisons between muscarinic and nicotinic receptor psychoph armacology and between the pathology of the basal forebrain as opposed to pedunculopontine cholinergic systems in different diseases of the human brain affecting consciousness and cognition. The paradoxical eff ects of muscarinic receptor blockade to induce hallucinations and of R EM sleep-associated cholinergic activation of the thalamus to induce d reaming may be related to the differential distribution and activity o f muscarinic receptor subtypes or to the differing responses of intrin sic GABA neurons in cortex and thalamus. (C) 1995 Academic Press, Inc.