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1 in regulating the behavioral responses to an addictive drug.
2 ventral tegmental area (VTA) in response to addictive drugs.
3 egion important for the rewarding effects of addictive drugs.
4 vironment or by the inappropriate stimuli of addictive drugs.
5 vational effects of both natural rewards and addictive drugs.
6 er' and become possible treatments for other addictive drugs.
7 the reinforcing actions of cocaine and other addictive drugs.
8 receptors in the effects of psychoactive and addictive drugs.
9 ving-that are associated with chronic use of addictive drugs.
10 ctions and dysfunctions that are elicited by addictive drugs.
11 mission and a target for antidepressants and addictive drugs.
12 at mediate vision, memory, and the action of addictive drugs.
13 etic mechanisms in the behavioral effects of addictive drugs.
14 m was stimulated by food, sexual arousal, or addictive drugs.
15 liking of various rewards including food and addictive drugs.
16 tural rewards converges with that engaged by addictive drugs.
17 nt role in homeostatic adaptations caused by addictive drugs.
18 r system, modulates the rewarding effects of addictive drugs.
19 ological reward processes may be affected by addictive drugs.
20 an identifying functional characteristic of addictive drugs.
21 ehaviors involved in responses to stress and addictive drugs.
22 ental conditioned stimuli and the effects of addictive drugs.
23 behavioral markers of the propensity to take addictive drugs.
24 o the rewarding effects of several different addictive drugs.
25 ave been implicated in enhanced responses to addictive drugs.
26 tical site of synaptic plasticity induced by addictive drugs.
27 entral tegmental area in response to several addictive drugs.
28 accompany some of the behavioural effects of addictive drugs.
29 ilar methods to examine the effects of other addictive drugs.
34 initial pharmacological effect common to all addictive drugs-an increase in dopamine levels in the me
35 internally acknowledged that nicotine is an addictive drug and cigarettes are the ultimate nicotine
36 l studies indicate that experimentation with addictive drugs and onset of addictive disorders is prim
37 mediate incentive motivation ("wanting") for addictive drugs and other rewards, but not their hedonic
38 al tegmental area (VTA) is a major target of addictive drugs and receives multiple GABAergic projecti
39 ystem can modulate the reinforcing effect of addictive drugs and the anxiolytic effect of nicotine.
41 ral tegmental area (VTA) are a key target of addictive drugs, and neuroplasticity in this region may
42 s compulsive motivation or "wanting" to take addictive drugs; and (d) the idea that dysfunction of fr
44 Alterations in behavior after exposure to addictive drugs are a striking example of chemical alter
45 duced in the central nervous system (CNS) by addictive drugs are of interest because of their relatio
46 The response to novelty and sensitivity to addictive drugs are positively correlated with the hormo
47 esolimbic dopamine-a defining feature of all addictive drugs-as a neural substrate for these drug-ada
48 Environmental stimuli repeatedly linked to addictive drugs become learned associations, and those s
49 vern activity-dependent synaptic plasticity, addictive drugs can derail the experience-driven neural
51 of the brain mechanisms they activate; most addictive drugs cause elevations in extracellular levels
53 amine, a potent psychostimulant, is a highly addictive drug commonly used by persons living with HIV
56 tantly, the mechanisms through which HIV and addictive drugs disrupt homeostatic immune and CNS funct
58 on (LS) is an early behavioral adaptation to addictive drugs, driven by the increase of dopamine in t
61 s motor effects produced by marijuana and by addictive drugs enhancing dopamine levels in the Acb.
62 ug seeking in addicts and animals exposed to addictive drugs, even after abstinence or extinction.
63 ol.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Over the course of addictive drug exposure, there is a transition in the co
65 n for and the reinforcement by both food and addictive drugs extends the argument for a common mechan
68 ction with a peer and then choose between an addictive drug (heroin or methamphetamine) and social in
71 ely used to study motivational properties of addictive drugs in animals, but has rarely been used in
73 oordinate the actions of distinct classes of addictive drugs in NAc, we developed a CRISPR (clustered
82 oadaptations induced by repeated exposure to addictive drugs is a persistent sensitized behavioral re
85 red the observation that a common feature of addictive drugs is to activate, by a double tyrosine/thr
88 ng the brain mechanisms affected by distinct addictive drugs may inform targeted therapies against sp
90 a (VTA) dopamine (DA) neurons in response to addictive drugs may underlie the transition from casual
91 002 to 0.0052; p=0.069), and the presence of addictive-drug metabolites in urine (0.103, -0.013 to 0.
92 ysiologically relevant concentrations of the addictive drug nicotine directly cause in vivo hippocamp
93 have become more effective at delivering the addictive drug nicotine, they have become the dominant f
94 t of tobacco that drives use, and like other addictive drugs, nicotine reinforces self-administration
98 SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT: It is believed that addictive drugs often render an addict's brain reward sy
100 aal et al. find that exposure to any of five addictive drugs or exposure to a brief stressor produces
101 receptors could be developed for additional addictive drugs or hormones and metabolites, which would
102 ressive predominance of rewarding effects of addictive drugs over their aversive properties likely co
104 l area (VTA) are modified during exposure to addictive drugs, producing sensitization, a progressive
105 Questions about the molecular actions of addictive drugs, prominently including the actions of al
109 rved in visual system, synapses modulated by addictive drugs (rewarded synapses), chronically overact
110 ine reward circuits known to be activated by addictive drugs (right posterior amygdala, posterior hip
112 te into psychotic symptoms and contribute to addictive-drug-seeking behavior, anxiety and phobia.
113 and that it produces the hallmark effects of addictive drugs: sensitization, tolerance, physical depe
117 inforcing biologically rewarding events, but addictive drugs such as cocaine can inappropriately exer
122 as adaptations to chronic administration of addictive drugs such as psychostimulants and therapeutic
125 yle but also the immunomodulatory effects of addictive drugs, such as cocaine, may account for their
132 Although cocaine is known to be a highly addictive drug, there appears to be a select subset of i
133 tamate interaction in MSN that is usurped by addictive drugs to elicit persistent behavioural alterat
137 Many studies support a perspective that addictive drugs usurp brain circuits used by natural rew
139 nally address the question of whether or not addictive drugs usurp the neuronal networks recruited by
140 ed plasticity-some of which is shared by all addictive drugs, whereas other aspects are specific to c
144 ediction of the three most frequently abused addictive drugs with the sensitivity and accuracy of the