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The Effect of D-cycloserine on Emotional Processing

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Healthy Volunteer
Cycloserine
Interventions
Drug: Placebo
Registration Number
NCT03961464
Lead Sponsor
University of Oxford
Brief Summary

To investigate the effects of N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) partial agonist DCS on emotional processing, memory and stress tasks

Detailed Description

The aim of the present study is to assess the effect of DCS on emotional processing relevant to antidepressant drug activity. For this, 40 healthy volunteers will be recruited to the study and randomized to receive a single session of 250mg DCS or placebo. 3 hours and 24 hours after active drug/placebo administration, the effects of emotional processing via the use of cognitive tasks will be assessed. Also, given the important role of DCS in memory and stress, we also include tasks to explore changes in autobiographical memory and in psychological and physiological measures of stress and arousal.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
40
Inclusion Criteria
  • Male or female
  • Willing and able to give informed consent for participation in the study
  • Body mass index (BMI) within the range of 19-30kg/m2
  • Sufficiently fluent English to understand and complete the task
Exclusion Criteria
  • Currently take any psychoactive medication.
  • Have taken any CNS-active medication during the last 6 weeks.
  • Currently take any medication with cycloserine, ethionamide or isoniazid
  • Have suffered from any past or current psychiatric disorder (e.g. depression, anxiety)
  • Have lifetime history of epilepsy or other significant disease or disorder which, in the opinion of the investigator, may either put the participants at risk because of participation in the study, or may influence the result of the study, or the participant's ability to participate in the study.
  • Have history of heart disease, significant hypertension
  • Have history of Megaloblastic Anaemia, Sideroblastic Anaemia
  • Have history of kidney disease with reduction in kidney function
  • Have severe renal impairment
  • Have suffered from lactose intolerance
  • Are currently pregnant, breastfeeding or trying to get pregnant
  • Have a current or past history of drug or alcohol dependency
  • Have participated in a psychological or medical study involving the use of medication within the last 3 months
  • Have previously participated in a study using the same, or similar, emotional processing tasks
  • Smoke more than 5 cigarettes per day
  • Have dyslexia (given the nature of the computer tasks)

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
PlaceboPlacebooral, capsule, lactose
d-cycloserined-cycloserineoral, capsule, 250 mg
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Performance in a facial expression recognition task3 hours after drug/placebo administration

Participants are presented with individual pictures of facial expressions of emotions. Each presented face displays one of six basic emotions (anger, disgust, fear, happiness, sadness, or surprise). Each emotional expression is presented at different levels of intensity which have been created by combining shape and texture features of the two extremes "neutral" (0%) and "full prototypical emotion" (100%) to varying degrees. Examples of neutral facial expressions are presented as well. Participants are instructed to correctly classify each facial expression as angry, disgusted, fearful, happy, sad, surprised or neutral both as quickly and as accurately as possible. Responses are made by pushing one out of seven labelled keys on a response box. Hit rates, false alarm rates, and reaction times for correct classifications are measured separately for each emotion.

Performance in an emotional recall task3 hours after drug/placebo administration

Following a delay period after the emotional categorisation task (about 15 min), emotional recall memory is assessed. Participants are asked to recall and write down as many words as possible from the emotional categorization task. Numbers of correctly and incorrectly recalled positive and negative words are measured.

Performance in an autobiographical memory task3 hours after drug/placebo administration

The autobiographical memory cues are presented visually on computer screen in a fixed order, with positive, negative, and neutral words alternating, each word will be presented only once. Participants are instructed that, for each cue word, they should respond with a memory of an autobiographical event which had lasted less than 1 day and which had occurred at a specific time and place. They are told that the event could have occurred recently or a long time ago and could have been important or trivial but that no responses should be repeated for a subsequent word. Correct and incorrect examples are given. Responses are tape-recorded for subsequent coding.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Performance in an emotional categorisation task3 hours after drug/placebo administration

Participants are presented with positive and negative personality descriptors and are asked to classify the valence of each word. These words describe either extremely agreeable/positive characteristics (e.g. "cheerful", "honest", "optimistic") or extremely disagreeable/negative characteristics (e.g. "domineering", "untidy", "hostile") and are presented individually in the centre of the screen. Participants are instructed to imagine themselves overhearing someone describing them with each of the words and to indicate as quickly and accurately as possible whether they would like or dislike to be described with each of the words. Responses are made by pressing a correspondingly labelled key on a button box. Reaction times for correct classifications are measured separately for positive and negative words.

Performance in a cognitive stress task3 hours after drug/placebo administration

The computer stress task is designed to induce psychological stress.It is presented as a series of mental arithmetic, verbal and visuospatial challenges on the screen which participants are required to solve. In the stress condition, there is a time limit for completing each challenge, which is displayed on the screen as a time bar. To induce a high failure rate, the timing for each challenge is set depending on individual's previous performance at 10% less than the time that it took to previously correctly solve challenges. The difficulty of the challenges is automatically varied to ensure that participants are getting only 20-40% of the challenges correctly completed within the time. To ensure a high failure rate, some of the verbal challenges (anagrams) are impossible to solve. Participants are given feedback on their performance on the screen which indicates that they are performing badly.

Performance in an emotional recognition taskEmotional recognition memory is assessed by presenting participants with the original personality descriptors plus an equal number of matched distractor words (50% positive, 50% negative). Participants are asked to ind

3 hours after drug/placebo administration

Performance in a facial expression recognition task24 hours after drug/placebo administration

Participants are presented with individual pictures of facial expressions of emotions. Each presented face displays one of six basic emotions (anger, disgust, fear, happiness, sadness, or surprise). Each emotional expression is presented at different levels of intensity which have been created by combining shape and texture features of the two extremes "neutral" (0%) and "full prototypical emotion" (100%) to varying degrees. Examples of neutral facial expressions are presented as well. Participants are instructed to correctly classify each facial expression as angry, disgusted, fearful, happy, sad, surprised or neutral both as quickly and as accurately as possible. Responses are made by pushing one out of seven labelled keys on a response box. Hit rates, false alarm rates, and reaction times for correct classifications are measured separately for each emotion.

Performance in an emotional recall task24 hours after drug/placebo administration

Participants are asked to recall and write down as many words as possible from yesterday's emotional categorization task. Numbers of correctly and incorrectly recalled positive and negative words are measured.

Performance in an emotional faces dot probe task3 hours after drug/placebo administration

Pictures of positive and negative emotional stimuli (happy and fearful facial expressions) are presented individually together with a matched neutral stimulus (neutral face). On each trial, one stimulus is shown above and the other below a central fixation point. Subsequently, a probe appears behind one of the stimuli and participants have to correctly classify the probe as quickly and as accurately as possible. Stimuli can be masked (i.e. presented very briefly and followed by a jumbled face) or unmasked (i.e. presented for a longer period without a subsequent masking stimulus). Reaction times for correct responses are recorded and vigilance scores are calculated for masked and unmasked positive and negative stimuli by subtracting reaction time data from trials when the probe appeared in the same position as the emotional stimulus (congruent trials) from trials when the probe appeared in the opposite position to the emotional stimulus (incongruent trials).

Performance in an autobiographical memory task24 hours after drug/placebo administration

The autobiographical memory cues are presented visually on computer screen in a fixed order, with positive, negative, and neutral words alternating, each word will be presented only once. Participants are instructed that, for each cue word, they should respond with a memory of an autobiographical event which had lasted less than 1 day and which had occurred at a specific time and place. They are told that the event could have occurred recently or a long time ago and could have been important or trivial but that no responses should be repeated for a subsequent word. Correct and incorrect examples are given. Responses are tape-recorded for subsequent coding.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

University of Oxford

🇬🇧

Oxford, United Kingdom

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