Spontaneous eye-blink rates and dopaminergic systems

Brain. 1983 Sep:106 (Pt 3):643-53. doi: 10.1093/brain/106.3.643.

Abstract

A series of studies demonstrated a possible relationship between eye-blink rate and central dopamine activity. First, apomorphine and other dopamine agonists acutely increased blink rate in monkeys, an effect blocked by sulpiride. Secondly, parkinsonian patients with levodopa-induced dyskinesia exhibited twice the mean blink rate (21 blinks/min) of other parkinsonians (11 blinks/min, P less than 0.002) whereas the more symptomatic of the nondyskinetic patients had a very slow rate (3 blinks/min, P less than 0.01). Thirdly, schizophrenic patients had an elevated mean blink (31 vs 23 blinks/min for normals, P less than 0.05) which was normalized by neuroleptic treatment. Thus, the correlation with central dopamine activity may also prove clinically useful in selected neuropsychiatric disorders.

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Apomorphine / pharmacology
  • Blinking* / drug effects
  • Bromocriptine / pharmacology
  • Diazepam / pharmacology
  • Dopamine / physiology*
  • Dose-Response Relationship, Drug
  • Macaca mulatta
  • Sulpiride / pharmacology
  • Time Factors

Substances

  • Bromocriptine
  • Sulpiride
  • Apomorphine
  • Diazepam
  • Dopamine