210 research outputs found

    Similarity of the discriminative stimulus effects of ketamine, cyclazocine, and dextrorphan in the pigeon

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    Separate groups of pigeons were trained to discriminate the IM injection of ketamine, cyclazocine, or dextrorphan from saline. Each of the training drugs and phencyclidine produced dose-related, drug-appropriate responding in each group of birds. In contrast, ethylketazocine and nalorphine generally produced responding appropriate for saline. These results indicate that common elements of discriminable effects exist among ketamine, cyclazocine, and dextrorphan, structurally dissimilar compounds that are generally considered to belong to distinct pharmacological classes.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/46423/1/213_2004_Article_BF00422419.pd

    The incidence of unpleasant dreams after sub-anaesthetic ketamine

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    Ketamine is an N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA)receptor antagonist with psychotogenic effects and for whichthere are diverse reports of whether pleasant or unpleasantdreams result during anaesthesia, post-operatively or aftersub-anaesthetic use. The aim was to assess in healthy volunteers the incidence ofunpleasant dreams over the three nights after receiving asub-anaesthetic dose of ketamine, in comparison to placebo,and with retrospective home nightmare frequency as acovariate.Thirty healthy volunteers completed questionnairesabout retrospective home dream recall and were then giveneither ketamine or placebo. Ketamine resulted in significantly more meandream unpleasantness relative to placebo and caused athreefold increase in the odds ratio for the incidence of anunpleasant dream. The number of dreams reported over thethree nights did not differ between the groups. Theincidence of unpleasant dreams after ketamine use waspredicted by retrospectively assessed nightmare frequencyat home.Ketamine causes unpleasant dreams over thethree post-administration nights. This may be evidence of aresidual psychotogenic effect that is not found on standardself-report symptomatology measures or a result of disturbedsleep electrophysiology. The results have theoretical implications for the relationship between nightmares and schizotypy

    Interaction of synthetic opioid metenkephalin peptide analogs, lilly 127623 and FK 33-824 with indole hallucinogens: Antagonism of N,N-dimethyltryptamine- and LSD-induced disruption of food-rewarded bar pressing behavior in the rat

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    The selected opioid metenkephalin synthetic peptide analogs Lilly (LY) 127623 and FK 33-824 were tested for behavioral dose effects and potential interaction with N,N-dimethyltryptamine (DMT) and lysergic acid diethylamide-25 (LSD) in adult male Holtzman rats trained on a positive reinforcement fixed-ratio 4 (FR-4) behavioral bar pressing schedule, i.e., a reward of 0.01 ml sugar-sweetened evaporated milk was earned on every fourth bar press. DMT (3.2 mg/kg) and LSD (0.1 mg/kg), administered IP following a 0.9% NaCl 15–20-min control pretreatment, disrupted established food-rewarded FR-4 bar pressing in a consistent and reproducible manner. Animals pretreated IP with predetermined behaviorally noneffective doses of LY 127623 (0.01–0.32 mg/kg) and FK 33-824 (0.001–0.01 mg/kg) 15–20 min prior to receiving DMT demonstrated significant antagonism to DMT-induced disruption of FR-4 bar pressing, while doses of 0.10–0.32 mg/kg LY 127623 and 0.00032–0.0032 mg/kg FK 33-824 significantly antagonized LSD-induced behavioral effects.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/46430/1/213_2004_Article_BF00432112.pd

    The epidemiology and patterns of acute and chronic toxicity associated with recreational ketamine use

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    Ketamine was originally synthesised for use as a dissociative anaesthetic, and it remains widely used legitimately for this indication. However, there is increasing evidence of non-medical recreational use of ketamine, particularly in individuals who frequent the night-time economy. The population-level and sub-population (clubbers) prevalence of recreational use of ketamine is not known but is likely to be similar, or slightly lower than, that of other recreational drugs such as cocaine, MDMA, and amphetamine

    Genome-wide association study across European and African American ancestries identifies a SNP in DNMT3B contributing to nicotine dependence

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    Cigarette smoking is a leading cause of preventable mortality worldwide. Nicotine dependence, which reduces the likelihood of quitting smoking, is a heritable trait with firmly established associations with sequence variants in nicotine acetylcholine receptor genes and at other loci. To search for additional loci, we conducted a genome-wide association study (GWAS) meta-analysis of nicotine dependence, totaling 38,602 smokers (28,677 Europeans/European Americans and 9925 African Americans) across 15 studies. In this largest-ever GWAS meta-analysis for nicotine dependence and the largest-ever cross-ancestry GWAS meta-analysis for any smoking phenotype, we reconfirmed the well-known CHRNA5-CHRNA3-CHRNB4 genes and further yielded a novel association in the DNA methyltransferase gene DNMT3B. The intronic DNMT3B rs910083-C allele (frequency = 44-77%) was associated with increased risk of nicotine dependence at P = 3.7 x 10(-8) (odds ratio (OR) = 1.06 and 95% confidence interval (CI) = 1.04-1.07 for severe vs mild dependence). The association was independently confirmed in the UK Biobank (N = 48,931) using heavy vs never smoking as a proxy phenotype (P = 3.6 x 10(-4), OR = 1.05, and 95% CI = 1.02-1.08). Rs910083-C is also associated with increased risk of squamous cell lung carcinoma in the International Lung Cancer Consortium (N = 60,586, meta-analysis P = 0.0095, OR = 1.05, and 95% CI = 1.01-1.09). Moreover, rs910083-C was implicated as a cis-methylation quantitative trait locus (QTL) variant associated with higher DNMT3B methylation in fetal brain (N = 166, P = 2.3 x 10(-26)) and a cis-expression QTL variant associated with higher DNMT3B expression in adult cerebellum from the Genotype-Tissue Expression project (N = 103, P = 3.0 x 10(-6)) and the independent Brain eQTL Almanac (N = 134, P = 0.028). This novel DNMT3B cis-acting QTL variant highlights the importance of genetically influenced regulation in brain on the risks of nicotine dependence, heavy smoking and consequent lung cancer.Peer reviewe

    A neuroradiologist’s guide to arterial spin labeling MRI in clinical practice

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