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The effect of nitrous oxide on the performance of psychomotor tests

E. W. S. Cheam, D.P. Dob, A M Skelly, G. G. Lockwood

Anaesthesia September 1, 1995 DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2044.1995.tb06136.x via OpenAlex

Summary

AI-generated from the abstract

In seven healthy volunteers, nitrous oxide caused a dose-related impairment of memory, a reduction in tapping frequency, and an increase in inspection time. A paradoxical increase in critical flicker-fusion threshold was observed, but there was no effect on critical fusion-flicker threshold or time sense. Memory tests performed 20 minutes after withdrawal of nitrous oxide showed incomplete recovery, and subjective effects persisted for several hours.

Study at a glance

Characteristics Experimental study Peer reviewed
Sample size 7
Population Healthy volunteers
Intervention Nitrous oxide
Keywords Flicker fusion threshold Nitrous oxide Psychomotor learning Medicine Audiology
Citations 13
Key finding Nitrous oxide causes dose-related impairment of memory, reduction in tapping frequency, and increase in inspection time, with a paradoxical increase in critical flicker-fusion threshold but no effect on critical fusion-flicker threshold or time sense.

Abstract

The effect of different nitrous oxide concentrations on the performance of psychomotor tests (inspection time, tapping frequency, critical flicker fusion, picture memory and time sense) was investigated in seven healthy volunteers. The results show a dose-related impairment of memory, a reduction in tapping frequency and an increase in inspection time. A paradoxical increase in critical flicker-fusion threshold was observed. There was no effect on critical fusion-flicker threshold or time sense. Recovery was incomplete for memory tests performed 20 min after withdrawal of nitrous oxide. Subjective effects persisted for several hours.

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