Acetylcholine and hallucinations: disease-related compared to drug-induced
alterations in human consciousness
by
Perry EK, Perry RH
MRC Neurochemical Pathology Unit,
Newcastle General Hospital,
Newcastle upon
Tyne, United Kingdom.
Brain Cogn 1995 Aug; 28(3):240-58
ABSTRACT
Newly proposed criteria for Lewy body dementia include alterations in
consciousness. Lewy body dementia is also associated with a disturbance in
cholinergic transmission; neocortical cholinergic deficits in this disorder are
more extensive than in Alzheimer's disease and are correlated with symptoms
commonly associated with delirium, such as visual hallucinations. The
traditional view that derangements of the basal forebrain cholinergic system in
Alzheimer's disease relate specifically to memory impairment is assessed in
terms of a more general role for cortical acetylcholine in consciousness. This
extends the concept that cortical acetylcholine enhances neuronal signal to
noise ratio. It is suggested that muscarinic receptor activation in the cortex
is involved in confining the contents of the discrete self-reported conscious
"stream." In the absence of cortical acetylcholine, currently irrelevant
intrinsic and sensory information, which is constantly processed in parallel at
the subconscious level, enters conscious awareness. This is consistent with the
ability of anti-muscarinic drugs administered medically, recreationally, or
ritualistically to induce visual hallucinations and other perceptual
disturbances. The hypothesis is explored through comparisons between muscarinic
and nicotinic receptor psychopharmacology and between the pathology of the basal
forebrain as opposed to pedunculopontine cholinergic systems in different
diseases of the human brain affecting consciousness and cognition. The
paradoxical effects of muscarinic receptor blockade to induce hallucinations and
of REM sleep-associated cholinergic activation of the thalamus to induce
dreaming may be related to the differential distribution and activity of
muscarinic receptor subtypes or to the differing responses of intrinsic GABA
neurons in cortex and thalamus.
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