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Effects of methylphenidate on saccadic responses in patients with ADHD
Klein C., Jr Fischer B., Fischer B., Hartnegg K.
Experimental Brain Research. 145(1):121-5, 2002 Jul
abstract:
This study examined the effects of methylphenidate on different measures
of saccade control, using a repeated measurement design, and the
experimental and statistical control of practice effects. Twenty-seven
boys with ADHD (mean age 12.6 years, range 10-15 years) were randomly
assigned to two testing order conditions (first on-, second
off-medication versus first off-, second on-medication) and accomplished
the pro-saccadic overlap and the anti-saccadic 200-ms gap tasks (200
trials each). Methylphenidate was found to reduce pro- and anti-saccadic
reaction times, error correction times, and the proportion of direction
errors during the anti-saccade task. Furthermore, the drug augmented the
proportions of express saccades and error corrections. Overlain practice
effects were found for most of these measures. Our results suggest a
weakening of the fixation, and a strengthening of the "voluntary" system
of saccade control by methylphenidate.
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