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877


Plasma homovanillic acid in neuroleptic responsive and nonresponsive schizophrenics

Duncan E; Wolkin A; Angrist B; Sanfilipo M; Wieland S; Cooper TB; Rotrosen J
Changes in plasma homovanillic acid (HVA) were investigated in neuroleptic responsive and nonresponsive schizophrenics in order to delineate parameters of dopamine regulation, which may underlie differences in neuroleptic responsivity. Nineteen schizophrenics were treated with haloperidol for 6 weeks. HVA was sampled at baseline, 24 hr after initial neuroleptic dose, and after 6 weeks of treatment. Subjects were pretreated with debrisoquin in order to reduce the peripheral production of HVA. The responders had an initial rise in HVA at 24 hr after first neuroleptic dose, followed by a decline back to baseline over the 6 weeks of treatment. The nonresponders' HVA failed to rise at 24 hr after first neuroleptic dose. At 6 weeks of treatment their HVA had fallen to significantly below baseline. Thus, a rise in HVA 24 hr after the first dose of neuroleptic predicted treatment response; a fall in HVA at 6 weeks to below pretreatment values was associated with neuroleptic nonresponse
PMID: 8274579
ISSN: 0006-3223
CID: 57549

Vitamin E treatment of tardive dyskinesia

Adler LA; Peselow E; Rotrosen J; Duncan E; Lee M; Rosenthal M; Angrist B
OBJECTIVE: The authors studied the effects of vitamin E treatment of tardive dyskinesia; earlier studies have produced contradictory results. METHOD: Twenty-eight patients with tardive dyskinesia were treated in a double-blind, parallel-group comparison study of 8-12 weeks of treatment with vitamin E (1600 IU/day) or matching placebo capsules. RESULTS: The Abnormal Involuntary Movement Scale scores of the patients treated with vitamin E improved significantly compared to the scores of the patients given placebo. CONCLUSIONS: These results support earlier findings of the efficacy of vitamin E in treating tardive dyskinesia
PMID: 8102511
ISSN: 0002-953x
CID: 8277

Chronic food restriction and weight loss produce opioid facilitation of perifornical hypothalamic self-stimulation

Carr KD; Wolinsky TD
Electrical stimulation frequency thresholds for lateral hypothalamic (LH) self-stimulation were monitored throughout a 3 week period of food restriction and a subsequent 3 week period of re-feeding. Rats with electrodes placed in the perifornical LH were sensitive to this dietary manipulation as evidenced by a high positive correlation between body weight and self-stimulation threshold. Rats with electrodes in the zona incerta/subincertal region or ventral hypothalamus displayed little or no change in threshold. Lateral ventricular injection of naltrexone (200.0 nM) reversed the decline in threshold that was otherwise present during food restriction in rats with perifornical placements. Naltrexone had no effect on thresholds of rats with placements outside the perifornical region. These findings suggest that food restriction and weight loss activate an opioid mechanism that facilitates perifornical LH self-stimulation. The documented association of perifornical LH with the phenomenon of stimulation-induced feeding, and the reciprocal connections between this region and gustatory structures, supports the hypothesis that facilitation of self-stimulation by food restriction is related to the natural phenomenon of positive alliesthesia (i.e. the hunger-dependency of food reward)
PMID: 8481792
ISSN: 0006-8993
CID: 13189

ELEVATED PLA-2 ACTIVITY IN SCHIZOPHRENICS AND PSYCHIATRIC CONTROLS [Meeting Abstract]

NOPONEN, M; SANFILIPO, M; SAMANICH, K; FUKUI, T; RYER, H; KO, G; ROTROSEN, J
ISI:A1993LA41700221
ISSN: 0006-3223
CID: 54175

Norbinaltorphimine blocks the feeding but not the reinforcing effect of lateral hypothalamic electrical stimulation

Carr KD; Papadouka V; Wolinsky TD
The role of central kappa opioid receptors in the regulation of feeding and reward was evaluated using electrical brain stimulation paradigms in combination with the selective kappa antagonist, norbinaltorphimine (nor-BNI). Lateral ventricular injection of 10.0 and 50.0 nmol doses of nor-BNI increased the lateral hypothalamic stimulation frequency threshold for eliciting feeding behavior but had no effect on threshold for self-stimulation in the absence of food. This result is identical to those previously reported for naloxone and antibodies to dynorphin A and suggests that opioid activity is associated with feeding behavior rather than the eliciting brain stimulation. A further similarity between naloxone, dynorphin antiserum, and nor-BNI is their preferential effect on feeding threshold values obtained later, rather than initially, in a post-injection test session. This pattern of threshold elevation is shown to differ from that of the appetite suppressants, amphetamine and phenylpropanolamine, which elevate threshold uniformly throughout a post-injection test. The signature pattern of threshold elevation produced by opioid antagonism is consistent with the hypothesis that opioid activity is involved in the maintenance rather than the initiation of feeding. Specifically, it is hypothesized that a dynorphin A/kappa receptor mechanism is triggered by food taste and sustains feeding behavior by facilitating incentive reward
PMID: 7870973
ISSN: 0033-3158
CID: 7879

Chronic food restriction produces mu and kappa opioid facilitation of reward [Meeting Abstract]

Carr, K.; Papadouka, V.
BIOSIS:PREV199497063153
ISSN: 0190-5295
CID: 92225

The effect of chronic food restriction on mu opioid receptors in the rat: A quantitative autoradiographic study [Meeting Abstract]

Wolinsky, T. D.; Carr, K.; Hiller, J. M.; Simon, E. J.
BIOSIS:PREV199497065146
ISSN: 0190-5295
CID: 92224

Distribution and characterization of a neuropeptide processing enzyme in adult rat brain [Meeting Abstract]

Berman, E.; Carr, K.; Fricker, L. D.; Devi, L.
BIOSIS:PREV199497066360
ISSN: 0190-5295
CID: 92223

Negative symptoms and hypofrontality in chronic schizophrenia

Wolkin A; Sanfilipo M; Wolf AP; Angrist B; Brodie JD; Rotrosen J
Frontal lobe dysfunction is widely suspected to underlie negative symptoms of schizophrenia. This hypothesis is based largely on long-standing observations of the similarities between the effects of frontal lobe lesions and negative symptoms. However, there is little direct evidence specifically for such an association in schizophrenic patients. We measured the relationship between decreased relative prefrontal cortex glucose metabolism (hypofrontality) using positron emission tomography and evaluated the severity of negative symptoms in 20 chronic schizophrenics who underwent scanning while not receiving neuroleptic drugs. We found a close relationship between negative symptoms and prefrontal hypometabolism, particularly in the right dorsolateral convexity. This association was regionally specific. Furthermore, there was no evidence that this relationship was an artifact of age, cerebral atrophy, or severity of positive symptoms
PMID: 1360200
ISSN: 0003-990x
CID: 57503

BRAIN OPIOID MECHANISMS THAT REGULATE INGESTIVE BEHAVIOR [Meeting Abstract]

CARR, KD
ISI:A1992KF51100011
ISSN: 0195-6663
CID: 54401