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Vol. 293, Issue 2, 383-389, May 2000
Departments of Emergency Medicine (E.B.B.) and Physiology and Biophysics (S.B.A., M.S.B.), University of Illinois at Chicago, College of Medicine, Chicago, Illinois
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Abstract |
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The coabuse of cocaine and ethanol is one of the most frequently used substance abuse combinations in the United States. The dopamine (DA) neurons in the ventral tegmental area (VTA) are important in the rewarding mechanism of these two substances. Cocaine is known to block the reuptake of DA and serotonin (5-HT). At concentrations below 1 µM, cocaine preferentially blocks the reuptake of 5-HT compared with DA. We have previously shown that ethanol increases the firing rate of DA neurons in the VTA, and that this excitation is enhanced by 5-HT. Extracellular single-unit recordings were made from VTA dopaminergic neurons in coronal brain slices from young adult Fischer 344 rats. Cocaine (1-10 µM) reduced the spontaneous firing rate in VTA dopaminergic neurons in a concentration-related manner. A lower concentration of cocaine (500 nM), which is a concentration that is pharmacologically relevant in addicts, produced only a very small decrease in the firing rate of VTA neurons but potentiated ethanol excitation of these neurons. Higher concentrations of cocaine (1 µM) did not enhance ethanol excitation. Ethanol-induced excitation was potentiated by the higher concentrations of cocaine (1 and 2 µM) in the presence of the D2 receptor antagonist sulpiride (1 µM). Furthermore, cocaine potentiation of ethanol-induced excitation was reversed by ketanserin (2 µM), a 5-HT2 antagonist. The enhanced ethanol excitation of VTA dopaminergic neurons caused by cocaine may partially explain the high incidence of the coabuse of these two substances.
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Introduction |
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In
the United States, illicit drug abuse is a national epidemic with an
estimated 13.9 million people using illicit drugs on a monthly basis in
1997 (SAMHSA, 1998
). Alcohol remains the most popular substance of
abuse; 111 million people currently drink alcohol on a monthly basis.
The 1997 National Household Survey on Drug Abuse found that 1.5 million
people in the United States currently use cocaine on a monthly basis,
thus making alcohol and cocaine two of the most widely abused drugs.
Coabuse of alcohol and cocaine is one of the most common illicit drug
combinations used in the United States. A national survey found that
96.5% of cocaine users also report alcohol use over the same month
period (concurrent use) and of these 85.7% took the two drugs together (simultaneous use) (Grant and Harford, 1990
). Over the past decade, the
Drug Abuse Warning Network report has stated that the combination of
ethanol and cocaine is one of the top two drug combinations found in
metropolitan emergency departments across the United States (DAWN,
1987
; SAMHSA, 1998
). The acute effects of simultaneous alcohol and
cocaine use include gross impairment of judgment and psychomotor skills
and increase the risk of traffic, occupational, and other accidents;
overdose; and death (Grant and Harford, 1990
).
The mesolimbic/mesocortical dopamine (DA) pathway is important for
self-administration of cocaine and ethanol (Wise, 1987
). Dopaminergic
neurons in the ventral tegmental area (VTA) are the cells of origin of
the mesolimbic/mesocortical DA pathways and provide dopaminergic
innervation of the nucleus accumbens (Oades and Halliday, 1987
).
Disruption of central dopaminergic systems alters ethanol
self-administration (Pfeffer and Samson, 1988
; Samson et al., 1993
).
Ethanol's rewarding properties may be related to its ability to excite
dopaminergic cell bodies in the VTA (Gessa et al., 1985
; Brodie et al.,
1990
). Cocaine's rewarding properties may be due to its blockade of DA
reuptake in the nucleus accumbens, which increases and prolongs the
effect of synaptically released DA (Ritz et al., 1987
; Koob and Bloom,
1988
). Disruption of central dopaminergic processes alters cocaine
self-administration (Roberts and Koob, 1982
; Pettit et al., 1984
; Koob
and Weiss, 1992
). Rats will self-administer ethanol directly into the
VTA (Gatto et al., 1994
; Rodd et al., 1998
) and will self-administer
cocaine into the nucleus accumbens (McBride et al., 1999
). These data
indicate that although the rewarding effect of both of these drugs is
mediated by the mesolimbic pathway, they are acting at different points on the pathway, ethanol at the dopaminergic cell bodies in the VTA and
cocaine in the DA terminal fields in the nucleus accumbens.
Serotonergic neurons project from the median and dorsal Raphe nuclei,
into both the VTA and nucleus accumbens (Herve et al., 1987
). In
addition to its blockade of DA reuptake, cocaine blocks the reuptake of
serotonin (5-HT); the affinity of cocaine for the 5-HT transporter is
higher than its affinity for the DA transporter (Ritz et al., 1987
). At
low concentrations (300 nM-1 µM), cocaine primarily enhanced 5-HT
responses in the nucleus accumbens, indicating a greater effect on 5-HT
reuptake than DA reuptake in this concentration range (Uchimura and
North, 1990
). Interestingly, these low concentrations of cocaine are
clinically relevant because mean plasma cocaine concentrations in
cocaine addicts at the time of maximum "high" were 370 to 570 nM
after intranasal administration and 730 nM to 1 µM after i.v.
injection of cocaine (Javaid et al., 1978
). In vivo dialysis studies in
rats estimate brain concentrations to be 1 to 2.5 µM 20 min after
i.v. injection of 3 mg/kg cocaine (Pan et al., 1994
).
Our previous studies in brain slices have shown that ethanol increases
the firing rate of dopaminergic VTA neurons in a
concentration-dependent manner over a behaviorally relevant range of
ethanol concentrations (20-200 mM; see Materials and
Methods) (Brodie et al., 1990
). Application of 5-HT potentiates
the ethanol-induced excitation of these neurons (Brodie et al., 1995
).
Furthermore, the monoamine reuptake blocker clomipramine potentiates
ethanol-induced excitation of dopaminergic VTA neurons, and
clomipramine enhances 5-HT-induced potentiation of ethanol excitation
(Trifunovic and Brodie, 1996
). The present study was undertaken to test
whether cocaine, which also blocks 5-HT reuptake, modulates ethanol
excitation of dopaminergic VTA neurons. Extracellular recording in
brain slices was used to measure the effect of pharmacologically
relevant concentrations of cocaine on ethanol excitation of
dopaminergic VTA neurons. Some of the results have been previously
reported in abstract form (Bunney et al., 1998
).
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Materials and Methods |
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Brain Slice Preparation.
Fischer 344 rats (100-200 g) were
sacrificed by cervical dislocation and the brain removed; this method
of sacrifice is rapid and acceptable for rats of this size. Animals
used in this study were treated in strict accordance with the National
Institutes of Health Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals.
The full methodology for our preparation of brain slices of the ventral tegmental area has been published previously (Brodie et al., 1990
). Briefly, the rat brain was removed rapidly from the cranium and kept
chilled and moist during dissection. A tissue block containing the VTA
and substantia nigra was mounted in a vibratome and submerged in
chilled, oxygenated artificial cerebrospinal fluid (aCSF). Coronal
sections (400-µm thickness) were cut and the tissue was mounted
directly in the recording chamber. Equilibration time of 1 h was
allowed after placement of tissue in the recording chamber before
recordings were made. The slice sat on a mesh platform, totally
submerged in the recording chamber, and was weighted down with small
platinum logs to increase the stability of recordings. A superfusion
system maintained the flow of medium at 2 ml/min; the temperature in
the recording chamber was ~35°C. The flow rate of fluid to the
recording chamber was continuously monitored with a flowmeter, and
adjustable valves were used to keep the rate constant. The small volume
chamber (~300 µl) used in these studies permitted the rapid
application and washout of drug solutions. The composition of the aCSF
in these experiments was 126 mM NaCl, 2.5 mM KCl, 1.24 mM
NaH2PO4, 2.4 mM CaCl
2, 1.3 mM MgSO4, 26 mM NaHCO3, and 11 mM glucose. The aCSF was saturated
with 95% O2, 5% CO2 at
35°C, pH = 7.4.
Cell Identification.
We positioned electrodes into the VTA
by visual guidance; the VTA is clearly visible in the fresh tissue as a
gray area medial to the darker substantia nigra and separated from the
nigra by white matter. Note that dopaminergic neurons have been shown
to have electrophysiological characteristics very different from those
of nondopaminergic cells in this region (Grace and Bunney, 1983
).
DA-containing neurons possess broad (>2.5 ms) action potentials often
with an inflection or "notch" on the rising phase, fire spontaneously and regularly at 0.5 to 5 Hz, and show inhibition by DA
(Bunney et al., 1973
; Aghajanian and Bunney, 1977
; Grace, 1987
). Only
neurons meeting these electrophysiological criteria were studied.
Drug Administration.
Drugs were added to the aCSF by means
of a calibrated infusion pump from stock solutions 100 to 1000 times
the desired final concentrations. The addition of drug solutions to the
aCSF was performed in such a way as to permit the drug solution to mix completely with aCSF before this mixture reached the recording chamber.
Final concentrations were calculated from aCSF flow rate, pump infusion
rate, and concentration of drug stock solution. Typically, drugs reach
equilibrium in the tissue after 2 to 3 min of application. (
)-Cocaine
HCl and (+/
)-sulpiride were obtained from Research Biochemicals
International (Natick, MA). Cocaine effects required ~1 h of washout
to fully reverse; therefore, lower concentrations of cocaine were
always tested (in the absence and presence of ethanol) before higher
concentrations of cocaine were administered. Each concentration of
cocaine was applied for 20 min before ethanol responses in the presence
of cocaine were tested.
Extracellular Recording.
Extracellular recording electrodes
were made from 1.5-mm-diameter glass tubing with filament and were
filled with 0.9% NaCl. Tip resistance of the microelectrodes ranged
from 4 to 8 M
. The Fintronics amplifier used in these recordings
includes a window discriminator, the output of which was fed to both a
rectilinear pen recorder and a computer-based data acquisition system
that was used for on-line and off-line analysis of the data. The
multiplexed output of the Fintronics amplifier was displayed on an
analog storage oscilloscope for accurate adjustment of the window
levels used to monitor single units. An IBM PC-based data acquisition system was used to calculate, display, and store the frequency of
firing over 5-s and 1-min intervals. Firing rate was determined before
and during drug application. Firing rate was calculated over a 1-min
interval immediately before drug administration and a 1-min interval
during the peak drug effect; drug-induced changes in firing rate were
expressed as the percentage change from the control firing rate
according to the formula ((FRD
FRC)/FRC) × 100, where FRD is the firing rate during the peak drug
effect and FRC is the control firing rate. The
change in firing rate thus is expressed as a percentage of the initial
firing rate, which controls for small changes in firing rate that may
occur over time.
Statistical Analysis.
Averaged numerical values were
expressed as means ± S.E. The significance of firing rate changes
before and after a single drug concentration was assessed with a paired
t test. For effects of multiple drug concentrations or more
than one drug, an appropriate one- or two-way ANOVA was used, followed
by Student-Newman-Keuls post hoc comparisons when needed (Kenakin,
1987
). Statistical analyses were performed with SigmaStat (SPSS,
Chicago, IL).
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Results |
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In this study, extracellular single-unit recordings were made from 64 VTA neurons (from 62 rats) that were identified as dopaminergic according to electrophysiological criteria (see Materials and Methods). All neurons fired spontaneous action potentials, with regular interspike intervals, at rates ranging from 0.59 to 3.0 Hz; the mean ± S.E. firing rate was 1.59 ± 0.07 Hz (n = 64).
Cocaine Concentration-Response Curve.
The spontaneous firing
rate of dopaminergic VTA neurons was reduced by cocaine. In the
dopaminergic VTA neuron illustrated in Fig.
1A, increasing concentrations of cocaine
(1-10 µM) caused a concentration-dependent decrease in the firing
rate of the neuron. Figure 1B is the pooled data from 16 experiments
similar to the one shown in Fig. 1A. The mean percentage decrease in
firing rate ranged from 3.9 ± 1.6% with 500 nM cocaine to
49.0 ± 8.2% with 10 µM cocaine. The inhibition of dopaminergic
VTA neurons by cocaine was concentration-dependent (one-way ANOVA,
F = 9.35; df = 3,51; P < .001).
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A Low Concentration of Cocaine Enhances Ethanol Excitation of VTA
Dopaminergic Neurons.
As discussed above, ethanol increases the
firing rate of dopaminergic VTA neurons. In the present study, we found
that the ethanol-induced excitation of dopaminergic VTA neurons is
enhanced by a low concentration of cocaine (500 nM). Figure
2 illustrates a single VTA neuron's
response to ethanol, followed by this cell's response to ethanol in
the presence of either 200 or 500 nM cocaine. In this cell before
cocaine, 80 mM ethanol caused a 36.5% increase in firing rate and 120 mM ethanol caused a 49.1% increase; in the presence of 200 nM cocaine,
80 mM ethanol caused an increase of 48.4% and 120 mM ethanol caused an
increase of 80.0% in firing. In 500 nM cocaine, 80 mM ethanol caused
an increase of 45.1% and 120 mM ethanol caused a 106.6% increase in
firing rate. Although burst activity is apparent during ethanol
application to this neuron, no other cell in these studies exhibited
any bursting activity in the absence or presence of cocaine or ethanol.
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.002).
Higher Concentrations of Cocaine Enhance Ethanol Excitation of
Dopaminergic VTA Neurons in the Presence of the D2 Receptor
Antagonist Sulpiride.
The following experiments were performed to
determine whether higher concentrations of cocaine (1 and 2 µM) would
enhance ethanol excitation when D2 receptors were
blocked by sulpiride. Excitation by 80 and 120 mM ethanol was measured
in each dopaminergic VTA neuron in the control condition, again in the
presence of sulpiride (1 µM), and after the subsequent additions of 1 and 2 µM cocaine with sulpiride still present; pooled data for 15 dopaminergic VTA neurons are shown in Fig.
4. In the presence of sulpiride, both 1 and 2 µM cocaine enhanced the ethanol excitation (see open triangles
and open squares in Fig. 4). A two-way ANOVA indicated that the ethanol
excitation was concentration-dependent (F = 11.73;
df = 1,112; P < .001) and that there
was a significant effect of the sulpiride-cocaine conditions
(F = 9.36; df = 3,112; P < .001). Specifically, Student-Newman-Keuls post hoc
comparisons showed that in the presence of sulpiride, both 1 and 2 µM
cocaine significantly (P < .02 and P < .001, respectively) enhanced the ethanol responses compared with
responses in sulpiride alone. Ethanol responses in sulpiride alone were
not significantly different from control (P > .05).
Note that in the absence of sulpiride, 1 µM cocaine did not
significantly enhance ethanol excitation as shown in Fig. 3C, but in
the presence of sulpiride this concentration of cocaine did
significantly enhance ethanol excitation (Fig. 4 and ANOVA and
above-mentioned post hoc tests).
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Cocaine Enhancement of Ethanol Excitation of Dopaminergic VTA
Neurons is Reversed by the 5-HT2 Antagonist
Ketanserin.
The following experiments were performed to determine
whether potentiation of ethanol excitation by cocaine could be reversed by a 5-HT antagonist. Ketanserin is a 5-HT2
receptor antagonist. Excitation by 120 mM ethanol was measured in each
dopaminergic VTA neuron in the control condition, again in the presence
of cocaine (500 nM), and after the subsequent addition of 2 µM
ketanserin in the continued presence of cocaine. Pooled data for six
dopaminergic VTA neurons are shown in Fig.
5. In the presence of cocaine, ethanol excitation was significantly enhanced (n = 6; one-way
ANOVA, F = 11.03; df = 2,10;
P < .005). Post hoc analysis showed that in the
presence of 2 µM ketanserin, the ethanol excitation was significantly different from that seen in the presence of cocaine alone
(n = 6; Student-Newman-Keuls, P < .005), and was not significantly different from the precocaine control
level (n = 6; Student-Newman-Keuls, P > .05).
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Discussion |
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In the present study, 1 to 10 µM cocaine decreased the firing
rate of dopaminergic VTA neurons in a concentration-dependent manner,
in agreement with previous studies (Brodie and Dunwiddie, 1990
; Lacey
et al., 1990
). This cocaine-induced inhibition is similar in magnitude
to that seen previously (Brodie and Dunwiddie, 1990
); inhibition of VTA
neurons by cocaine also has been observed in vivo (Einhorn et al.,
1988
). Ethanol, when applied alone, produced a concentration-dependent
excitation of dopaminergic VTA neurons, as previously reported (Brodie
et al., 1990
). A low concentration of cocaine (500 nM), which produced
only a small decrease in the firing rate of dopaminergic VTA neurons,
significantly potentiated the ethanol excitation. We have previously
shown that 5-HT and the monoamine reuptake inhibitor clomipramine
potentiate ethanol excitation (Brodie et al., 1995
; Trifunovic and
Brodie, 1996
). We hypothesize that the potentiation of ethanol
excitation by cocaine seen in the present study is due to cocaine's
blockade of the 5-HT transporter. Good potentiation of ethanol
excitation was seen with 200 nM cocaine in a few cells, but this
concentration was too low to routinely observe ethanol enhancement,
whereas robust potentiation of ethanol excitation was seen with 500 nM cocaine.
As the concentration of cocaine was increased to 1 µM, the
enhancement of ethanol excitation was lost. Concentrations of cocaine in the range of 1 to 10 µM block both DA and 5-HT reuptake, thus increasing the extracellular concentration of both neurotransmitters (Chen and Reith, 1994
). The cocaine-induced increase in extracellular dopamine inhibits VTA neurons by acting on D2
autoreceptors (Brodie and Dunwiddie, 1990
; Lacey et al., 1990
). We
suspect that the loss of potentiation of ethanol seen with higher
cocaine concentrations is due to the increasing blockade of the
dopamine transporter on the dopaminergic VTA neurons as the
concentration of cocaine increases. This blockade causes extracellular
DA to accumulate, which then acts on D2
autoreceptors on the dopaminergic VTA neurons to reduce their firing
rate. We hypothesized that if a D2 receptor antagonist (sulpiride) was added to the cocaine and ethanol
combination, then higher concentrations of cocaine (1 and 2 µM) might
be effective in producing enhancement of ethanol excitation in VTA
dopamine neurons. Indeed, we found that in the presence of sulpiride (1 µM) both 1 and 2 µM cocaine significantly enhanced ethanol
excitation. Thus, it may be that at low concentrations of cocaine (<1
µM) inhibition of the 5-HT transporter predominates, and as the
cocaine concentration increases, inhibition of the dopamine transporter becomes more apparent. Interestingly, it is the lower range of cocaine
concentrations that may be most pharmacologically relevant to human
cocaine abuse. Mean plasma cocaine concentrations measured in human
subjects at the time of maximum subjective "high" were 570 nM at 20 min after intranasal administration of 96 mg cocaine, and 730 nM at 5 min after i.v. injection of 16 mg cocaine (Javaid et al., 1978
). In the
present study, potentiation of ethanol excitation of dopaminergic VTA
neurons was seen with 500 nM cocaine.
If the cocaine-induced potentiation of ethanol excitation is mediated
by 5-HT, then the effect should be blocked by a 5-HT receptor
antagonist. We previously demonstrated that exogenously applied 5-HT
potentiates ethanol excitation of VTA neurons by an action at
5-HT2 receptors (Brodie et al., 1995
). In the
present study, we antagonized the cocaine-induced potentiation of
ethanol excitation with ketanserin, a 5-HT2
antagonist. This supports our hypothesis that potentiation of ethanol
excitation by cocaine is mediated by 5-HT, and is therefore similar to
the effects of 5-HT (Brodie et al., 1995
) and clomipramine (Trifunovic
and Brodie, 1996
) that we have previously described.
The 5-HT transporter is blocked at lower concentrations of cocaine than
is the dopamine transporter. The affinity of (
)-cocaine for binding
to the 5-HT transporter is ~4.5 times higher than for the dopamine
transporter (Ki for cocaine
displacement of binding to the 5-HT transporter is 0.14 µM and for
displacement of binding to the DA transporter is 0.64 µM) (Ritz et
al., 1987
). This difference in affinity could help to explain the
predominance of effects on the 5-HT transporter with cocaine
concentrations <1 µM in the present study and is consistent with
cocaine effects on other electrophysiological responses in the
literature. Cameron and Williams (1994)
have shown that 0.1 to 1 µM
cocaine reduces inhibitory synaptic potentials in the VTA via
inhibition of the 5-HT transporter. Similarly, in the nucleus
accumbens, Uchimura and North (1990)
conclude that lower concentrations
of cocaine (0.3-1 µM) effectively enhance the actions of 5-HT,
whereas potentiation of DA responses requires higher cocaine concentrations.
In the present study, ~70% of the DA neurons tested exhibited
cocaine enhancement of ethanol excitation compared with our previous
work indicating that 80 to 90% of DA neurons were potentiated by
application of exogenous 5-HT (Brodie et al., 1995
). The cocaine potentiation of ethanol excitation is a more indirect effect, in that
it requires the presence of 5-HT terminals and endogenous 5-HT in the
slice. The degree of cocaine potentiation seen in each experiment would
depend on the amount of endogenous 5-HT available in that brain slice.
Slice-to-slice variation in the content of endogenous 5-HT most likely
explains the 70% response rate.
In summary, dopaminergic VTA neurons have been implicated in the
rewarding effects of drugs of abuse, including ethanol and cocaine
(Roberts and Koob, 1982
; Wise, 1987
). Ethanol directly excites the cell
bodies of dopaminergic neurons in the VTA (Brodie et al., 1990
, 1999
),
which results in increased DA release in their terminal fields in the
nucleus accumbens (Di Chiara and Imperato, 1988
; Weiss et al., 1993
).
Cocaine inhibits the reuptake of DA, thereby increasing the amount of
DA accumulating at synapses in the nucleus accumbens (Bradberry and
Roth, 1989
). These effects of ethanol and cocaine should act
synergistically to increase the activity in the mesolimbic dopamine
reward pathway. In addition, the present study shows that, at
concentrations that are pharmacologically relevant in people
self-administering cocaine (<1 µM), cocaine increases the amount of
excitation produced in dopaminergic VTA neurons by a given amount of
ethanol. This enhancement of ethanol excitation was reversed by the
5-HT2 antagonist ketanserin, and is likely to be
due to cocaine inhibition of the 5-HT transporter, which predominates
in this lower range of cocaine concentrations. Although there may be
other interactions of ethanol and cocaine that contribute to their
coabuse liability (Farre et al., 1997
; Cami et al., 1998
; McCance-Katz
et al., 1998
), the potentiation of ethanol excitation by cocaine should
certainly contribute to the rewarding effects of this drug combination.
These data indicate that when taken together, ethanol and cocaine exert
synergistic effects to increase the activity of the mesolimbic reward
pathway. This synergistic effect may at least partially explain why the coabuse of cocaine and ethanol is so prevalent.
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Acknowledgments |
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We thank Maureen A. McElvain for excellent technical assistance and Arthur V. Appel for design and fabrication of the recording chamber used in this study.
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Footnotes |
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Accepted for publication January 17, 2000.
Received for publication August 5, 1999.
1 This study was supported by National Institute on Drug Abuse Grant DA00285 (to E.B.B.) and Grants AA05846 (to S.B.A.) and AA09125 (to M.S.B.) from the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism.
Send reprint requests to: E. Bradshaw Bunney, M.D., Department of Emergency Medicine (M/C 724), University of Illinois at Chicago, College of Medicine, CME 472, 808 S. Wood Ave., Chicago, IL 60612-7342. E-mail: bbunney{at}uic.edu
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Abbreviations |
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DA, dopamine; VTA, ventral tegmental area; 5-HT, serotonin; aCSF, artificial cerebral spinal fluid.
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Current Status and Clinical Perspectives (Chiodo LA andFreeman AS eds) pp 1-66,
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A multiple-dose study.
Biol Psychiatry
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