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Journal Article

Citation

Pickworth WB, Rohrer MS, Fant RV. Exp. Clin. Psychopharmacol. 1997; 5(3): 235-241.

Affiliation

Intramural Research Program, National Institute on Drug Abuse, Baltimore, Maryland 21224, USA. wpickwo@irp.nida.nih.gov

Copyright

(Copyright © 1997, American Psychological Association)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

9260070

Abstract

Some abused drugs have been reported to alter performance on naturalistic tasks such as driving and also on laboratory tasks. The performance effects of several drug classes were examined using a repeated measures design. Eight volunteers were administered 2 doses of ethanol, marijuana, amphetamine, hydromorphone, pentobarbital, or placebo on separate days. The larger dose of each increased subjective drug strength; however, only ethanol and pentobarbital impaired performance on circular lights, digit symbol substitution, and serial math tasks. Both ethanol and pentobarbital impaired performance on card-sorting tasks; impairment was evident at lower doses as the cognitive load increased. Results illustrate differences among drugs in producing performance impairment at doses that cause subjective effects. Increasing cognitive requirements uncovered performance impairment at lower doses.

Keywords: Cannabis impaired driving; DUID; Ethanol impaired driving


Language: en

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