Narcotic effects of nitrous oxide and compressed air on memory and auditory perception.

Rubicon Research Repository/Manakin Repository

Narcotic effects of nitrous oxide and compressed air on memory and auditory perception.

Show full item record


Title: Narcotic effects of nitrous oxide and compressed air on memory and auditory perception.
Author: Fowler, B; White, PL; Wright, GR; Ackles, KN
Abstract: Three experiments were conducted to examine the effects of 35percent N2 O (nitrous oxide) on human memory and auditory perception. In Experiment I, dichotic listening performance was found to be impaired. Experiment II used the same technique but was controlled for attenuation of sound transmission in the middle ear. No impairment was found. The perceptual effect found in Experiment I was peripheral, not central, and N2O did not impair short-term memory (STM). Experiment III used one-trial free recall of a word list. The shapes of the serial position curves were interpreted as indicating that N2O impairs long-term memory (LTM) but not STM. Experiment III provided no evidence, using cued recall, that the LTM deficit was due to impaired retrieval. Comparing these results with those for compressed air led to the conclusion that both N2O and hyperbaric nitrogen display an identical pattern of effects. A reason for the decrement found in some N2O STM studies may have been confounding the measurement of STM with that of LTM. Atmospheric Pressure Auditory Perception/*drug effects Female Human Inert Gas Narcosis/*etiology Male Memory/*drug effects Memory, Short-Term/drug effects Nitrous Oxide/*adverse effects
Description: Undersea and Hyperbaric Medical Society, Inc. (http://www.uhms.org )
URI: PMID: 7385446
http://archive.rubicon-foundation.org/2871
Date: 1980

Files in this item

Files Size Format View
7385446.pdf 3.836Mb PDF View/Open

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

  • Undersea Biomedical Research Journal
    The Undersea Baromedical Research journal was published by the Undersea Medical Society, Inc. (now the Undersea and Hyperbaric Medical Society) quarterly from 1974 to 1992 when the name changed to the Undersea and Hyperbaric Medicine Journal.

Show full item record

Browse

My Account