 Assessment of GABAA Benzodiazepine Receptor (GBzR) Sensitivity in  Patients with Alcohol Dependence
Assessment of GABAA Benzodiazepine Receptor (GBzR) Sensitivity in  Patients with Alcohol DependenceAlcohol and Alcoholism 2008 43(6):614-618
The aim of this study was to measure GABAA benzodiazepine  receptor (GBzR) sensitivity in alcohol-dependent patients and  compare with matched non-dependent drinkers. 
Nine  abstinent alcohol-dependent male patients, age matched with nine  male non-dependent social drinkers, received an intravenous  infusion of midazolam. Objective (saccadic eye movement slowing)  and subjective (visual analogue scales) measurements were  recorded at 15-min intervals for 2 h.
 There were no  differences in objective or subjective measures. 
Our hypothesis that patients with alcohol dependence would have less  slowing of their eye movements in response to this challenge,  reflecting reduced GBzR sensitivity, was not confirmed.
The reasons for this could mean that GBzR function returns to normal with abstinence, or that this paradigm is unable to measure the subtle subtype-specific changes in GBzR sensitivity that occur following dependent alcohol use.
Requst Reprint E-Mail: John.Potokar@bristol.ac.uk
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