The fundamental principle that unites addictive drugs appears to be that each enhances synaptic dopamine by means that dissociate it from normal behavioral control, so that they act to reinforce their own acquisition. This occurs via the modulation of synaptic mechanisms that can be involved in learning, including enhanced excitation or disinhibition of dopamine neuron activity, blockade of dopamine reuptake, and altering the state of the presynaptic terminal to enhance evoked over basal transmission. Amphetamines offer an exception to such modulation in that they combine multiple effects to produce nonexocytic stimulation-independent release of neurotransmitter via reverse transport independent from normal presynaptic function. Questions a...
Stimulant drugs, including novel psychoactive substances (NPS, formerly “legal highs”) have addictiv...
Addictive drugs can activate systems involved in normal reward-related learning, creating long-lasti...
An extensive amount of literature is available on drugs of abuse. However, current knowledge on cell...
The fundamental principle that unites addictive drugs appears to be that each enhances synaptic dopa...
A large variety of addictive substances and behaviors has been linked to changes in brain dopamine ...
The most sophisticated and mysterious human organ is the brain. The human brain is made up of billio...
Addictive drugs have in common that they target the mesocorticolimbic dopamine (DA) system. This sys...
AbstractDrug seeking and drug self-administration in both animals and humans can be triggered by dru...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2021The loss of control in amounts of drug consumed is a c...
Drug addiction is a brain disorder caused by the repetitive use of various chemicals which alter no...
How do addictive drugs hijack the brain's reward system? This review speculates how normal, physiolo...
Advances in neuroscience identified addiction as a chronic brain disease with strong genetic, neurod...
Dopamine is the primary neurotransmitter associated with addiction. Among the drugs that impact dopa...
Leading theories of drug addiction propose that repeated drug exposure produces a long-lasting homeo...
AbstractAn important conceptual advance in the past decade has been the understanding that the proce...
Stimulant drugs, including novel psychoactive substances (NPS, formerly “legal highs”) have addictiv...
Addictive drugs can activate systems involved in normal reward-related learning, creating long-lasti...
An extensive amount of literature is available on drugs of abuse. However, current knowledge on cell...
The fundamental principle that unites addictive drugs appears to be that each enhances synaptic dopa...
A large variety of addictive substances and behaviors has been linked to changes in brain dopamine ...
The most sophisticated and mysterious human organ is the brain. The human brain is made up of billio...
Addictive drugs have in common that they target the mesocorticolimbic dopamine (DA) system. This sys...
AbstractDrug seeking and drug self-administration in both animals and humans can be triggered by dru...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2021The loss of control in amounts of drug consumed is a c...
Drug addiction is a brain disorder caused by the repetitive use of various chemicals which alter no...
How do addictive drugs hijack the brain's reward system? This review speculates how normal, physiolo...
Advances in neuroscience identified addiction as a chronic brain disease with strong genetic, neurod...
Dopamine is the primary neurotransmitter associated with addiction. Among the drugs that impact dopa...
Leading theories of drug addiction propose that repeated drug exposure produces a long-lasting homeo...
AbstractAn important conceptual advance in the past decade has been the understanding that the proce...
Stimulant drugs, including novel psychoactive substances (NPS, formerly “legal highs”) have addictiv...
Addictive drugs can activate systems involved in normal reward-related learning, creating long-lasti...
An extensive amount of literature is available on drugs of abuse. However, current knowledge on cell...