Brain choline acetyltransferase activity in chronic, human users of cocaine, methamphetamine, and heroin

1999 
Cognitive impairment has been reported in some chronic users of psychostimulants, raising the possibility that long-term drug exposure might damage brain neuronal systems, including the cholinergic system, which are responsible for normal cognition. We measured the activity of choline acetyltransferase (ChAT), the marker enzyme for cholinergic neurones, in autopsied brain of chronic users of cocaine, methamphetamine, and, for comparison, heroin. As compared with the controls, mean ChAT levels were normal in all cortical and subcortical brain areas examined. However, the two of 12 methamphetamine users, who had the highest brain/blood drug levels at autopsy, had a severe (up to 94%) depletion of ChAT activity in cerebral cortex, striatum, and thalamus. Based on the subjects examined in the present study, our neurochemical data suggest that brain cholinergic neurone damage is unlikely to be a typical feature of chronic use of cocaine, methamphetamine, or heroin, but that exposure to very high doses of methamphetamine could impair, at least acutely, cognitive function requiring a normal nucleus basalis cholinergic neuronal system. Reduced brain ChAT might be explained in part by a hyperthermia-related mechanism as low ChAT levels have also been observed in brain of some patients with neuroleptic drug-associated hyperthermia. Studies of cognitive and brain cholinergic status in high dose users of MA are warranted.
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