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Journal Article

Citation

Dassanayake TL, Weerasinghe V, Dangahadeniya U, Kularatne K, Dawson A, Karalliedde L, Senanayake N. Clin. Neurophysiol. 2008; 119(1): 144-150.

Affiliation

Department of Physiology, Faculty of Medicine, Peradeniya 20400, Sri Lanka.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2008, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.clinph.2007.09.134

PMID

18042425

PMCID

PMC3145126

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To determine prolonged effects of organophosphorus (OP) insecticide poisoning on cognitive event-related potentials (ERPs). METHODS: ERPs of a group of 32 patients recovered from cholinergic phase of OP insecticide poisoning were compared with those of two matched control groups: 32 healthy volunteers and nine patients hospitalised with paracetamol overdose. A follow-up assessment was done in 21 patients (66% of the initial sample) 6 months after OP intoxication and the findings were compared with their initial ERP data. RESULTS: Patients showed highly significant prolongation of P300 latency, compared to healthy controls (p=0.003) and the controls with paracetamol overdose (p=0.016). Follow-up ERP findings of the patients revealed that this impairment remained unchanged even 6 months after OP poisoning (p=0.790). There was no significant difference in N100, P200 and N200 latencies or P300 amplitude either among the groups or between the two assessments of the patients with OP poisoning. CONCLUSIONS: Our results suggest that acute OP poisoning causes a delay in cognitive processes involved in stimulus classification, lasting at least for 6 months. SIGNIFICANCE: These findings highlight the possibility of development of long-lasting cognitive deficits following OP insecticide poisoning, and warrant longer-term prospective studies to determine whether this impairment is permanent.


Language: en

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