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COCAINE 2007 <240> Database EMBASE Accession Number 2007199780 Authors Kalivas P.W. Institution (Kalivas) Department of Neurosciences, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC, United States. (Kalivas) Department of Neurosciences, BSB403, 173 Ashley Ave., Charleston, SC 29425, United States. Country of Publication United Kingdom Title Neurobiology of cocaine addiction: Implications for new pharmacotherapy. Source American Journal on Addictions. 16(2)(pp 71-78), 2007. Date of Publication: Mar 2007. Abstract The development of pharmacotherapies for cocaine addiction has been disappointingly slow. However, new neurobiological knowledge of how the brain is changed by chronic pharmacological insult with cocaine is revealing novel targets for drug development. Certain drugs currently being tested in clinical trials tap into the underlying cocaine-induced neuroplasticity, including drugs promoting GABA or inhibiting glutamate transmission. Armed with rationales derived from a neurobiological perspective that cocaine addiction is a pharmacologically induced disease of neuroplasticity in brain circuits mediating normal reward learning, one can expect novel pharmacotherapies to emerge that directly target the biological pathology of addiction. Copyright copyright American Academy of Addiction Psychiatry. ISSN 1055-0496 Publication Type Journal: Article Journal Name American Journal on Addictions Volume 16 Issue Part 2 Page 71-78 Year of Publication 2007 Date of Publication Mar 2007 COCAINE 2007 <256> Database EMBASE Accession Number 2007198963 Authors Peoples L.L. Kravitz A.V. Lynch K.G. Cavanaugh D.J. Institution (Peoples) Department of Psychology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, United States. (Peoples, Kravitz) Neuroscience Graduate Group, University of Pennsylvania Medical School, Philadelphia, PA, United States. (Lynch) Department of Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania Medical School, Philadelphia, PA, United States. (Cavanaugh) Department of Physiology, University of California, San Francisco, CA, United States. (Peoples) Department of Psychology, University of Pennsylvania, 3720 Walnut Street, Philadelphia, PA 19106, United States. Country of Publication United Kingdom Title Accumbal neurons that are activated during cocaine self-administration are spared from inhibitory effects of repeated cocaine self-administration. Source Neuropsychopharmacology. 32(5)(pp 1141-1158), 2007. Date of Publication: 24 May 2007. Abstract Hypoactivity of the accumbens is induced by repeated cocaine exposure and is hypothesized to play a role in cocaine addiction. However, it is difficult to understand how a general hypoactivity of the accumbens, which facilitates multiple types of motivated behaviors, could contribute to the selective increase in drug-directed behavior that defines addiction. Electrophysiological recordings, made during sessions in which rats self-administer cocaine, show that most accumbal neurons that encode events related to drug-directed behavior achieve and maintain higher firing rates during the period of cocaine exposure (Task-Activated neurons) than do other accumbal neurons (Task-Non-Activated neurons). We have hypothesized that this difference in activity makes the neurons that facilitate drugdirected behavior less susceptible than other neurons to the chronic inhibitory effects of cocaine. A sparing of neurons that facilitate drug-directed behavior from chronic hypoactivity might lead to a relative increase in the transmission of neuronal signals that facilitate drugdirected behavior through accumbal circuits and thereby contribute to changes in behavior that characterize addiction (ie differential inhibition hypothesis). A prediction of the hypothesis is that neurons that are activated in relation to task events during cocaine self-administration sessions will show less of a decrease in firing across repeated self-administration sessions than will other neurons. To test this prediction, rats were exposed to 30 daily (6 h/day) cocaine self-administration sessions. Chronic extracellular recordings of single accumbal neurons were made during the second to third session and the 30th session. Betweensession comparisons showed that decreases in firing were exhibited by Task-Non-Activated, but not by Task-Activated, neurons. During the day 30 session, the magnitude of the difference in firing rate between the two groups of neurons was positively related to the propensity of animals to seek and take cocaine. The findings of the present study are consistent with a basic prediction of the differential inhibition hypothesis and may be relevant to understanding cocaine addiction. copyright 2007 Nature Publishing Group All rights reserved. ISSN 0893-133X Publication Type Journal: Article Journal Name Neuropsychopharmacology Volume 32 Issue Part 5 Page 1141-1158 Year of Publication 2007 Date of Publication 24 May 2007 COCAINE 2007 <259> Database EMBASE Accession Number 2007192341 Authors Devonshire I.M. Mayhew J.E.W. Overton P.G. Institution (Devonshire, Mayhew, Overton) Department of Psychology, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, S10 2TN, United Kingdom. Country of Publication United Kingdom Title Cocaine preferentially enhances sensory processing in the upper layers of the primary sensory cortex. Source Neuroscience. 146(2)(pp 841-851), 2007. Date of Publication: 11 May 2007. Abstract Sensory systems are believed to play an important role in drug addiction, particularly in triggering craving and relapse, and it has been shown in previous studies that administration of cocaine can enhance evoked responses in the primary sensory cortex of experimental animals. Primary sensory cortex comprises a multi-layered structure to which a variety of roles have been assigned; an understanding of how cocaine affects evoked activity in these different layers may shed light on how drug-associated sensory cues gain control over behavior. The aim of the present study was to examine how cocaine affects whisker sensory responses in different layers of the primary sensory (barrel) cortex. Field potential and multiunit activity were recorded from the cortex of anesthetized rats using 16 channel linear probes during repetitive (air puff) stimulation of the whiskers. In control conditions (under saline, i.v.), responses strongly adapted to the repeated sensory stimulation. Following an i.v. injection of cocaine (0.5 mg/kg, i.v.), this adaptation was strongly attenuated, giving each stimulus a more equal representation and weight. Attenuation of adaptation was more marked in the upper cortical layers in both field potential and multi-unit data. Indeed, in these layers, not only was adaptation attenuated but multi-unit response amplitudes under cocaine exceeded those under saline for stimuli occurring early in the train. The results extend our previous findings concerning the enhancement by cocaine of primary sensory responses. Insofar as enhanced neural responses equate to enhanced stimulus salience, the results indicate that cocaine may play a previously under-appreciated role in the formation of associations between drug and drug-related environmental cues by enhancing stimulus salience. The associative process itself may be assisted by a preferential action in the upper cortical layers, thought to be involved in learning and plasticity. copyright 2007 IBRO. ISSN 0306-4522 Publication Type Journal: Article Journal Name Neuroscience Volume 146 Issue Part 2 Page 841-851 Year of Publication 2007 Date of Publication 11 May 2007 COCAINE (A) 2007 <277> Database EMBASE Accession Number 2007181166 Authors Edwards S. Graham D.L. Bachtell R.K. Self D.W. Institution (Edwards, Graham, Bachtell, Self) Department of Psychiatry, Seay Center for Basic and Applied Research in Psychiatric Illness, UT Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX 75390-9070, United States. Country of Publication United Kingdom Title Region-specific tolerance to cocaine-regulated cAMP-dependent protein phosphorylation following chronic self-administration. Source European Journal of Neuroscience. 25(7)(pp 2201-2213), 2007. Date of Publication: Apr 2007. Abstract Chronic cocaine self-administration can produce either tolerance or sensitization to certain cocaine-regulated behaviours, but whether differential alterations develop in the biochemical response to cocaine is less clear. We measured cocaine-induced phosphorylation of multiple cAMP-dependent and -independent protein substrates in mesolimbic dopamine terminal regions following chronic self-administration. Changes in self-administering rats were compared to changes produced by passive yoked injection to identify reinforcement-related regulation, whereas acute and chronic yoked groups were compared to identify the development tolerance or sensitization in the biochemical response to cocaine. Microwavefixed brain tissue was collected immediately following 4 h of intravenous cocaine administration, and subjected to Western blot analysis of phosphorylated and total protein substrates. Chronic cocaine produced region- and substrate-specific tolerance to cAMPdependent protein phosphorylation, including phosphorylation in striatal and amygdala subregions and phosphorylation in the CA1 subregion of the hippocampus. Tolerance also developed to cAMP-independent phosphorylation in the prefrontal cortex. In contrast, sensitization to presynaptic regulation of synapsin <sup>S9</sup> phosphorylation developed in the hippocampal CA3 subregion while cAMP-dependent tyrosine hydroxylase<sup>S40</sup> phosphorylation decreased in striatal dopamine terminals. Cocaine-induced ERK and CREB<sup>S133</sup> phosphorylation were dissociated in many brain regions and failed to develop either tolerance or sensitization with chronic administration. Positive reinforcement-related correlations between cocaine intake and protein phosphorylation were found only in self-administering animals, while negative dose-related correlations were found primarily with yoked administration. These regional- and substratespecific adaptations in cocaine-induced protein phosphorylation are discussed in view of their potential impact on the development of cocaine addiction. copyright The Authors (2007). ISSN 0953-816X Publication Type Journal: Article Journal Name European Journal of Neuroscience Volume 25 Issue Part 7 Page 2201-2213 Year of Publication 2007 Date of Publication Apr 2007 COCAINE (A) 2007 <283> Database EMBASE Accession Number 2007173257 Authors Uhl G. Institution (Uhl) Molecular Neurobiology Branch, US National Institutes of Health Intramural Research Program, National Institute on Drug Abuse, Baltimore, MD 21224, United States. Country of Publication United Kingdom Title Premature poking: Impulsivity, cocaine and dopamine. Source Nature Medicine. 13(4)(pp 413-414), 2007. Date of Publication: Apr 2007. Abstract Impulsivity occurs frequently in people with addiction and other common disorders such as attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). Experiments in rats suggest that reduced dopamine receptor availability in the brain's ventral striatum may underlie links between impulsivity and addiction. copyright 2007 Nature Publishing Group. ISSN 1078-8956 Publication Type Journal: Short Survey Journal Name Nature Medicine Volume 13 Issue Part 4 Page 413-414 Year of Publication 2007 Date of Publication Apr 2007 COCAINE (A) 2007 <284> Database EMBASE Accession Number 2007169542 Authors Centonze D. Rossi S. De Chiara V. Prosperetti C. Battista N. Bernardi G. Mercuri N.B. Usiello A. Maccarrone M. Institution (Centonze, Rossi, De Chiara, Prosperetti, Bernardi, Mercuri) Clinica Neurologica, Dipartimento di Neuroscienze, Universita Tor Vergata, Via Montpellier 1, 00133, Rome, Italy. (Centonze, Rossi, De Chiara, Prosperetti, Battista, Bernardi, Mercuri, Maccarrone) Centro Europeo Per la Ricerca Sul Cervello (CERC), Fondazione Santa Lucia, Rome, Italy. (Battista, Maccarrone) Dipartimento di Scienze Biomediche, Universita di Teramo, Teramo, Italy. (Usiello) Behavioural Neuroscience Laboratory, CEINGE - Biotecnologie Avanzate, Naples, Italy. Country of Publication United Kingdom Title Chronic cocaine sensitizes striatal GABAergic synapses to the stimulation of cannabinoid CB1 receptors. Source European Journal of Neuroscience. 25(6)(pp 1631-1640), 2007. Date of Publication: Mar 2007. Abstract Behavioural studies indicate that cannabinoid receptors are implicated in cocaine addiction. The synaptic underpinning of cocaine-cannabinoid receptor interaction is however, obscure. We have studied electrophysiologically the sensitivity of cannabinoid receptors modulating synaptic transmission in the striatum of rats exposed to cocaine. One-day treatment with cocaine did not modify the synaptic response to HU210, a cannabinoid CB1 receptor agonist. Seven days cocaine-treatment, conversely, caused conditioned place preference, and sensitized striatal GABAergic synapses to the presynaptic effect of cannabinoid CB1 receptor stimulation. The cannabinoid receptor-induced modulation of glutamate transmission was unaltered by cocaine. Furthermore, the effects of chronic cocaine on cannabinoid-mediated regulation of striatal GABA synapses were attenuated one week after the discontinuation of cocaine, and absent two weeks later, indicating the progressive reversibility of the adaptations of cannabinoid system during abstinence of drug consumption. Our data support the concept that modulation of cannabinoid receptors might be useful against drug abuse. copyright The Authors (2007). ISSN 0953-816X Publication Type Journal: Article Journal Name European Journal of Neuroscience Volume 25 Issue Part 6 Page 1631-1640 Year of Publication 2007 Date of Publication Mar 2007 COCAINE 2007 <291> Database EMBASE Accession Number 2007159097 Authors Lundahl L.H. Lukas S.E. Institution (Lundahl, Lukas) Department of Psychiatry (Psychology), Harvard Medical School, McLean Hospital, United States. Country of Publication United Kingdom Title Negative cocaine effect expectancies are associated with subjective response to cocaine challenge in recreational cocaine users. Source Addictive Behaviors. 32(6)(pp 1262-1271), 2007. Date of Publication: Jun 2007. Abstract Although many studies have shown that cognitive effect expectancies are associated with drug use and drug treatment outcomes, few studies have compared effect expectancies with drug response following drug challenge. Healthy male and female volunteers (n = 19, ages 21-35) who reported using cocaine 1-4 times per month completed the Cocaine Effect Expectancy Questionnaire (CEEQ: [Schafer, J. and Brown, S.A. (1991). Marijuana and cocaine effect expectancies and drug use patterns. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 59, 558-565.]), were challenged with cocaine (0.9 mg/kg, i.n.), then completed a series of visual analog scales (VAS) and the Addiction Research Center Inventory (ARCI) at 15 min intervals for 3 h following cocaine administration. Significant positive correlations were found between global negative expectancies and peak responses on the VAS measures "Good," "Happy," "High," "Stimulated," and "Desire to Use Cocaine," and on the LSD subscale of the ARCI post-cocaine administration, and between global positive expectancies and the MBG subscale of the ARCI, and on VAS items "Anxious" and "Good" post-cocaine administration. Global positive expectancies also were positively correlated with peak systolic blood pressure, and global negative expectancies with peak heart rate after cocaine administration. These results suggest that negative and positive effect expectancies both play a complex role in the subjective experience of cocaine effects, and thus likely in the progression of non-use to recreational use, in the transition to abuse, and in individualized treatment strategies. copyright 2006 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. ISSN 0306-4603 Publication Type Journal: Article Journal Name Addictive Behaviors Volume 32 Issue Part 6 Page 1262-1271 Year of Publication 2007 Date of Publication Jun 2007 COCAINE (A) 2007 <340> Database EMBASE Accession Number 2007107644 Authors Pamplona F.A. Vendruscolo L.F. Takahashi R.N. Institution (Pamplona, Vendruscolo, Takahashi) Departamento de Farmacologia, Centro de Ciencias Biologicas, Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina, Florianopolis, SC, Brazil. Country of Publication United Kingdom Title Increased sensitivity to cocaine-induced analgesia in Spontaneously Hypertensive Rats (SHR). Source Behavioral and Brain Functions. 3, 2007. Article Number: 9. Date of Publication: 2007. Abstract This study examined the analgesic effect of cocaine in Spontaneously Hypertensive Rats (SHR), which are considered a suitable model for the study of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), and in Wistar (WIS) rats of both sexes using the hot-plate test. In addition, we tested whether habituation to the unheated hot-plate apparatus, that "normalizes" the basal hypoalgesic phenotype of SHR, alters the subsequent cocaine-induced analgesia (CIA) in this strain. SHR of both sexes were hypoalgesic compared to WIS rats in the hot-plate test and showed higher sensitivity to CIA. Habituation to the unheated hot-plate reduced the basal nociceptive latency of SHR, suggesting cognitive/emotional modulation of pain in this strain, but did not alter the magnitude of CIA. The present study shows increased sensitivity to CIA in SHR, which may be related to abnormalities in the mesocorticolimbic dopaminergic system. Further studies using SHR strain may reveal new information on the neurobiological mechanisms underlying ADHD and its co-morbidity with drug addiction. copyright 2007 Pamplona et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. ISSN 1744-9081 Publication Type Journal: Article Journal Name Behavioral and Brain Functions Volume 3 Year of Publication 2007 Date of Publication 2007 COCAINE 2007 <342> Database EMBASE Accession Number 2007107434 Authors Crits-Christoph P. Gibbons M.B.C. Barber J. Hu B. Hearon B. Worley M. Gallop R. Institution (Crits-Christoph, Gibbons, Barber, Hu, Hearon, Worley) Department of Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA, United States. (Gallop) Department of Statistics and Applied Mathematics, West Chester University, West Chester, PA, United States. Country of Publication United Kingdom Title Predictors of sustained abstinence during psychosocial treatments for cocaine dependence. Source Psychotherapy Research. 17(2)(pp 250-263), 2007. Date of Publication: Mar 2007. Abstract Using data from the National Institute of Drug Abuse Collaborative Cocaine Treatment Study, the authors examined 24 patient pretreatment variables as predictors of outcome. The most clinically meaningful outcome in the treatment of substance dependence - degree of sustained abstinence - was used. Predictor variables included demographic features, aspects of the disorder and the recovery environment, expectations about treatment, and beliefs about addiction, relapse, and the 12-step philosophy. Four of the 24 examined variables - craving, acuity of biomedical problems, belief in the 12-step philosophy, and expectations for improvement - were significantly predictive of degree of sustained abstinence using a Bonferroni-corrected alpha level. No significant interactions with treatment condition were noted. The joint effect of the 4 predictor variables had a clinically meaningful impact on outcome. ISSN 1050-3307 Publication Type Journal: Article Journal Name Psychotherapy Research Volume 17 Issue Part 2 Page 250-263 Year of Publication 2007 Date of Publication Mar 2007