Pages that link to "Q51741634"
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The following pages link to Fluoxetine reduces intravenous cocaine self-administration in rats (Q51741634):
Displaying 50 items.
- Dual dopamine/serotonin releasers: potential treatment agents for stimulant addiction (Q24641896) (← links)
- Dual dopamine/serotonin releasers as potential medications for stimulant and alcohol addictions (Q24647786) (← links)
- Behavioral and neurochemical effects of amphetamine analogs that release monoamines in the squirrel monkey (Q24651855) (← links)
- Reward processing by the dorsal raphe nucleus: 5-HT and beyond (Q26796703) (← links)
- 2002 Medicinal Chemistry Division Award Address: Monoamine Transporters and Opioid Receptors. Targets for Addiction Therapy (Q28201877) (← links)
- Balance between dopamine and serotonin release modulates behavioral effects of amphetamine-type drugs (Q28274119) (← links)
- Nonhuman primate neuroimaging and cocaine medication development (Q28304167) (← links)
- How to study sex differences in addiction using animal models (Q30276500) (← links)
- Monoamine transporter inhibitors and substrates as treatments for stimulant abuse (Q30413718) (← links)
- Neurobiological changes mediating the effects of chronic fluoxetine on cocaine use. (Q30453028) (← links)
- Serotonin transporters upregulate with chronic cocaine use. (Q32025737) (← links)
- Behavioral, thermal and neurochemical effects of acute and chronic 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine ("Ecstasy") self-administration (Q33624591) (← links)
- Cocaine self-administration in dopamine-transporter knockout mice (Q33858028) (← links)
- Serotonin at the nexus of impulsivity and cue reactivity in cocaine addiction (Q33874819) (← links)
- The effects of concurrent administration of +/-3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine and cocaine on conditioned place preference in the adult male rat. (Q33883665) (← links)
- Novel pharmacotherapeutic treatments for cocaine addiction (Q34065088) (← links)
- Comparative neuropharmacology of ibogaine and its O-desmethyl metabolite, noribogaine (Q34101436) (← links)
- Improving the quality of substance dependency treatment with pharmacotherapy (Q34118712) (← links)
- Serotonin1B receptor stimulation enhances cocaine reinforcement. (Q34480705) (← links)
- The serotonin 5-HT2C receptor and the non-addictive nature of classic hallucinogens (Q34546304) (← links)
- Sigma(1) (sigma(1)) receptor antagonists represent a new strategy against cocaine addiction and toxicity (Q34804462) (← links)
- Association Between 5HT1b Receptor Gene and Methamphetamine Dependence (Q35107785) (← links)
- Serotonin neurotransmission in cocaine sensitization (Q35230467) (← links)
- Preclinical evaluation of the abuse potential of the analgesic bicifadine (Q35453895) (← links)
- A novel IV cocaine self-administration procedure in rats: differential effects of dopamine, serotonin, and GABA drug pre-treatments on cocaine consumption and maximal price paid (Q35789196) (← links)
- Evaluation of the "Pipeline" for Development of Medications for Cocaine Use Disorder: A Review of Translational Preclinical, Human Laboratory, and Clinical Trial Research (Q37062538) (← links)
- Conflation of cocaine seeking and cocaine taking responses in IV self-administration experiments in rats: methodological and interpretational considerations (Q37337379) (← links)
- MDMA (“ecstasy”) abuse as an example of dopamine neuroplasticity (Q37823932) (← links)
- Multiple controls exerted by 5-HT2C receptors upon basal ganglia function: from physiology to pathophysiology (Q38101499) (← links)
- Designing modulators of 5-hydroxytryptamine signaling to treat abuse disorders (Q38248774) (← links)
- Cocaine and selective monoamine uptake blockers (sertraline, nisoxetine, and GBR 12935) prevent the d-fenfluramine-induced head-twitch response in mice (Q38551706) (← links)
- The stimulatory and inhibitory components of cocaine's actions on the 5-HTP-induced 5-HT2A receptor response (Q38560281) (← links)
- Fluoxetine: a spectrum of clinical applications and postulates of underlying mechanisms (Q38567315) (← links)
- Stimulation of 5-HT(1B) receptors enhances cocaine reinforcement yet reduces cocaine-seeking behavior. (Q39822376) (← links)
- Effects of increasing the magnitude of an alternative reinforcer on drug choice in a discrete-trials choice procedure (Q41149285) (← links)
- A Critique of Fixed and Progressive Ratio Schedules Used to Examine the Neural Substrates of Drug Reinforcement (Q41527773) (← links)
- Decreased Incentive Motivation Following Knockout or Acute Blockade of the Serotonin Transporter: Role of the 5-HT2C Receptor. (Q41725093) (← links)
- Dopaminergic mechanisms of reinstatement of MDMA-seeking behaviour in rats (Q41904082) (← links)
- Chronic blockade or constitutive deletion of the serotonin transporter reduces operant responding for food reward (Q42171474) (← links)
- Serotonergic basis of antipsychotic drug effects in schizophrenia. (Q42537934) (← links)
- Cocaine and fluoxetine induce the expression of the hVH-5 gene encoding a MAP kinase phosphatase. (Q42538305) (← links)
- Increased vulnerability to cocaine in mice lacking the serotonin-1B receptor (Q42542157) (← links)
- Blockade of 5-HT2A receptors in the medial prefrontal cortex attenuates reinstatement of cue-elicited cocaine-seeking behavior in rats (Q42712127) (← links)
- Effects of the serotonin 5-HT(2) antagonist, ritanserin, and the serotonin 5-HT(1A) antagonist, WAY 100635, on cocaine-seeking in rats (Q43513050) (← links)
- Subtle differences in the discriminative stimulus effects of cocaine and GBR-12909. (Q43616100) (← links)
- A genetic deletion of the serotonin transporter greatly enhances the reinforcing properties of MDMA in rats (Q43668070) (← links)
- Adaptations in pre- and postsynaptic 5-HT1A receptor function and cocaine supersensitivity in serotonin transporter knockout rats. (Q43822284) (← links)
- Inhibition of cocaine self-administration by fluoxetine or D-fenfluramine combined with phentermine (Q43867256) (← links)
- Activation of 5-HT(1B) receptors in the nucleus accumbens reduces self-administration of amphetamine on a progressive ratio schedule (Q43913115) (← links)
- BTCP is a potent reinforcer in rats: comparison of behavior maintained on fixed- and progressive-ratio schedules (Q43921721) (← links)