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1 -alpha (MK886) or cannabinoid CB1 receptors (rimonabant).
2 out mice and after subchronic treatment with rimonabant.
3 sts tested as well as by the inverse agonist rimonabant.
4  ranges, and both effects were attenuated by rimonabant.
5 co-administration of the CB1 inverse agonist rimonabant.
6 s high and displaceable by pretreatment with rimonabant.
7 pensable for the acute hypophagic effects of rimonabant.
8 itro, similar to the CB1 receptor antagonist rimonabant.
9 tries about suicide in individuals receiving rimonabant.
10 cross the accumbens and were not affected by rimonabant.
11 late membrane remodeling like LPI, AM251, or rimonabant.
12 ns of behaving rats treated with intravenous rimonabant (0.3 mg/kg) or vehicle, followed by methamphe
13                            Administration of rimonabant (1 mg/kg, intravenously) also blocked the spe
14 g/kg, IP), but not the CB(1) inverse agonist rimonabant (1 mg/kg, IP).
15  of the cannabinoid CB1 receptor antagonists rimonabant (1 microg; 1 microl) or AM251 (1 microg; 1 mi
16        Finally, the cannabinoid-1 antagonist rimonabant (1 muM) inhibited DGL-alpha-induced neuritoge
17 der baseline and pretreatment conditions (3, rimonabant, 10 mg/kg, iv) and quantified at later times
18 negative affective states in humans (FG7142, rimonabant, 13-cis retinoic acid).
19 istration of the cannabinoid inverse agonist rimonabant (150 mug/kg, i.v).
20 ase were randomly assigned to receive either rimonabant 20 mg (n=9381) or matching placebo (n=9314).
21 r large trials, after one year of treatment, rimonabant 20 mg led to greater weight loss and reductio
22 etary counseling, were randomized to receive rimonabant (20 mg daily) or matching placebo, and underw
23                   Pretreatment with intra-RM rimonabant (20 microg) antagonized the antinociception p
24 -1 I.P.).However, CB1 receptor antagonism by rimonabant (4.6mg kg-1 I.P.) or SLV319 (15mg kg-1 I.P.)b
25                            Pretreatment with rimonabant (50 microg, ivt) produced a statistically sig
26 s of intracerebral (i.c.) microinjections of rimonabant (a CB(1) receptor inverse agonist) were studi
27 are uniformly inhibited by administration of rimonabant, a cannabinoid receptor (CB1) antagonist, sug
28                However, clinical trials with rimonabant, a CB1R antagonist with inverse agonist profi
29                                              Rimonabant, a selective cannabinoid-1 receptor blocker,
30                                              Rimonabant administration robustly reduced breakpoints i
31    Peripheral treatment with CB1 antagonist (Rimonabant) also reduced food intake and body weight but
32                  The anti-obesity medication rimonabant, an antagonist of cannabinoid type-1 (CB(1))
33  administering a receptor-saturating dose of rimonabant, an inverse agonist at the CB(1) receptor.
34 ive antagonists of CB1 have largely targeted rimonabant, an inverse agonist of CB1.
35 milar to the CB1R antagonist/inverse agonist rimonabant, analogues 27 and 30 decrease oral alcohol se
36                                         Both rimonabant and 14g, a potent brain penetrant CB1 recepto
37  occurred in 364 (3.9%) patients assigned to rimonabant and 375 (4.0%) assigned to placebo (hazard ra
38                                However, both rimonabant and AM4113 reduced cue-induced reinstatement
39                                         Both rimonabant and AM4113 reduced two effects of nicotine an
40 strated in the synthesis of antiobesity drug Rimonabant and anti-HIV agent PNU-32945.
41  monkeys by the CB1-receptor inverse agonist rimonabant and by the recently developed CB1-receptor ne
42 A) pathway, inhibited by the CB1R antagonist rimonabant and Gi uncoupler pertussis toxin, and absent
43 nger adenylyl cyclase activation compared to rimonabant and it is a better enhancer of insulin secret
44  receptor GPR55 responded strongly to AM251, rimonabant, and lysophosphatidylinositol but only very w
45                                              Rimonabant appears to have a favorable safety and tolera
46 s were compared in reversed-phase HPLC using rimonabant as an analyte.
47  1997), orlistat (FDA approved in 1999), and rimonabant (available in Europe and given FDA approvable
48                                              Rimonabant blocked LPS hypothermia when administered I.C
49  also blocked by the CB1 receptor antagonist rimonabant, but this is thought to represent an effect o
50                            Administration of rimonabant (CB1 inverse agonist) completely abrogated th
51 ity for the inverse agonist JD-5037 than for rimonabant compared to CB1 full length.
52 ke the case with improgan, pretreatment with rimonabant completely blocked CP-55,940 hypothermia.
53                            Pretreatment with rimonabant completely blocked the antinociceptive effect
54                                    Moreover, rimonabant decreased LFP gamma power at 80 Hz (high gamm
55 ive placebo or continued to receive the same rimonabant dose while the placebo group continued to rec
56 ine neurons in DAT-cre mice, both AM6527 and rimonabant dose-dependently inhibited dopamine-dependent
57 placebo, 5 mg/d of rimonabant, or 20 mg/d of rimonabant for 1 year.
58                                         With rimonabant, gastrointestinal (3038 [33%] vs 2084 [22%]),
59 tric adverse effects were more common in the rimonabant group (43.4% vs 28.4%, P < .001).
60                         Four patients in the rimonabant group and one in the placebo group committed
61 ompared with the placebo group, the 20 mg of rimonabant group produced greater mean (SEM) reductions
62 Patients who were switched from the 20 mg of rimonabant group to the placebo group during year 2 expe
63 rse event was nausea (11.2% for the 20 mg of rimonabant group vs 5.8% for the placebo group).
64 ebo group, 620 (51%) patients in the 5 mg of rimonabant group, and 673 (55%) patients in the 20 mg of
65 roup, and 673 (55%) patients in the 20 mg of rimonabant group.
66          However, intra-RM pretreatment with rimonabant had no effect on antinociceptive responses fo
67 s an agent with a novel mechanism of action, rimonabant has a potential to be a useful adjunct to lif
68            Although SR141716A, also known as rimonabant, has been withdrawn from the market due to se
69 ion which is blocked by the CB(1) antagonist rimonabant, implying a cannabinoid mechanism of action.
70 cell lines and attenuated inverse agonism by rimonabant in CB1-HEK cells.
71 ed and compared for the determination of the rimonabant in mouse plasma samples at the low nanograms
72  was reversed by the CB1 receptor antagonist rimonabant in naive rats but not in CFA-treated rats.
73     Finally, the effects of microinfusion of rimonabant in the CeA on anxiety-like behavior, and food
74 ht into the neurobiological effectiveness of rimonabant in treating addictive disorders.
75 8, an analog of the selective CB1 antagonist rimonabant, in vivo as a potential CB1 radioligand for P
76                  Consistently, we found that rimonabant increases gastrointestinal metabolism via inc
77 talepsy, and analgesia that were reversed by rimonabant, indicating CB(1) involvement.
78 n in the nucleus tractus solitarii abolished rimonabant-induced hypophagia.
79 e with the centrally and peripherally acting rimonabant induces weight loss and improves glucose home
80 cal injection of the CB1 receptor antagonist rimonabant into the rostral ventromedial medulla blocked
81 f the CB(1)-cannabinoid receptor antagonist, rimonabant, into the duodenum markedly reduced fat sham
82                                              Rimonabant is a first selective blocker of the cannabino
83                                 Therapy with rimonabant is also associated with favorable changes in
84 t versus human CB1R, whereas the affinity of rimonabant is comparable for all three CB1Rs.
85                          Determining whether rimonabant is useful in management of coronary disease w
86 A and its analogs inhibited binding to [(3)H]rimonabant-labeled CB(1) and displayed agonist actions i
87 A and its analogs inhibited binding to [(3)H]rimonabant-labeled CB(1) and displayed agonist actions i
88 es drug-taking and seeking behaviors without rimonabant-like adverse effects.
89 hile those who continued to receive 20 mg of rimonabant maintained their weight loss and favorable ch
90                   The activation of GPR55 by rimonabant may be responsible for some of the off-target
91                                     Finally, rimonabant, microinfused directly into the CeA, precipit
92 id CB(1) receptor inverse agonist/antagonist rimonabant [N-piperidino-5-(4-chlorophenyl)-1-(2,4-dichl
93                         In contrast, neither rimonabant nor AM4113 modified cocaine-reinforced or foo
94    The effects of systemic administration of rimonabant on anxiety-like behavior, food intake, body w
95 ment, the study failed to show an effect for rimonabant on disease progression for the primary end po
96 inistration of the CB1 antagonist SR141716A (Rimonabant) on cocaine self-administration (0.5 mg/kg/in
97 the antagonist drug SR141716A (also known as Rimonabant or Accomplia), but does not affect the bindin
98           Treatment with the CB1 antagonists rimonabant or AM281 markedly improved cardiac dysfunctio
99 ignaling, and the inhibition was reversed by rimonabant or JD5037 in wild-type but not liver-specific
100 ithdrawal was blocked by the CB1R antagonist rimonabant or the genetic deletion of CB1R in forebrain
101 ere randomized to receive placebo, 5 mg/d of rimonabant, or 20 mg/d of rimonabant for 1 year.
102 multicenter trial, treatment with 20 mg/d of rimonabant plus diet for 2 years promoted modest but sus
103                   Systemic administration of rimonabant precipitated anxiety-like behavior and anorex
104                         The CB(1) antagonist rimonabant precipitated signs of physical dependence in
105                           The CB1 antagonist rimonabant precipitated withdrawal in mice treated chron
106 dose CP55,940 did not produce hypothermia or rimonabant-precipitated withdrawal in CB1KO mice.
107 -dose CP55,940 also produced hypothermia and rimonabant-precipitated withdrawal in WT, but not CB1KO,
108 satory mechanism to dampen anxiety, and (ii) rimonabant precipitates a negative emotional state by bl
109                      We investigated whether rimonabant precipitates a negative emotional state in ra
110                                              Rimonabant produced persistent blockade of 2-AG self-adm
111 L/6 mice with the CB(1) receptor antagonist, rimonabant, produced a reduction of both D(2) and D(4) d
112 ing analogues of the CB1 receptor antagonist Rimonabant(R), CB2 receptor agonists, and Cannabis sativ
113    Compounds with TPSAs higher than that for rimonabant (rimonabant TPSA = 50) and excellent function
114                                        Since rimonabant's withdrawal, several groups are pursuing per
115                                              Rimonabant seems to be well tolerated, with a primary si
116   Similar studies with improgan demonstrated rimonabant-sensitive sites within the dorsal and ventrol
117 ocking studies suggested that taranabant and rimonabant shared the same general binding area of CB1R
118 on, combination treatment with FGFR4 ASO and rimonabant showed additive reduction in BW and adiposity
119                            At the same dose, rimonabant significantly increased cigarette smoking qui
120 rious combinations of three small molecules: rimonabant, SP600125 and AS1842856.
121 nnabinoid receptor-1 (CB1) by the antagonist rimonabant (SR141716) has been associated with activatio
122 (1) cannabinoid receptor (CB(1) receptor) by rimonabant (SR141716) reduces self-administration of alc
123 th the cannabinoid CB(1) receptor antagonist rimonabant (SR141716).
124 tion of CB1 inverse agonists, represented by rimonabant (SR141716A), otenabant, and taranabant, are c
125 revented by the CB(1) cannabinoid antagonist rimonabant (SR141716A).
126 rse cannabinoid receptor 1 agonist SR141716 (Rimonabant) suggesting that the anti-inflammatory effect
127                                 Similarly to rimonabant, systemic administration of the peripherally
128                                   Similar to rimonabant, taranabant interacted with a cluster of arom
129 rectic effects similar to the CB1 antagonist rimonabant that once was marketed for the treatment of o
130 tem (CNS) related side effects observed with rimonabant, the first clinically approved CB1 inverse ag
131                               In contrast to rimonabant,the I.C.V. administration of AEA (50 mug) enh
132 ptimized to reduce lipophilicity compared to rimonabant to achieve peripherally active molecules with
133 entricularly with ghrelin and CB1 antagonist rimonabant to study tissue AMPK activity and gene expres
134  with TPSAs higher than that for rimonabant (rimonabant TPSA = 50) and excellent functional activity
135                                              Rimonabant-treated patients had a larger reduction in bo
136                                              Rimonabant-treated patients had greater decreases in hig
137                                              Rimonabant-treated patients were rerandomized to receive
138 n CB1-KO mice and by intracerebroventricular rimonabant treatment, suggesting that central CB1 recept
139                                       In the rimonabant vs placebo groups, high-density lipoprotein c
140                                       In the rimonabant vs placebo groups, imputing results based on
141                                       In the rimonabant vs placebo groups, PAV (95% confidence interv
142    The blockade of LPS hypothermia by I.C.V. rimonabant was associated with suppression of the circul
143                                The effect of rimonabant was further studied.
144                                              Rimonabant was generally well tolerated; the most common
145 th S(7.39)383 but not with K(3.28)192, while rimonabant was hydrogen-bonded with K(3.28)192 but not w
146 e notable distinction between taranabant and rimonabant was that taranabant was hydrogen-bonded with
147 clinically approved CB1 receptor antagonist, rimonabant, was withdrawn because of adverse central ner
148 ing the cannabinoid receptor inverse agonist rimonabant were successful in producing modest weight lo
149 r data demonstrate that AM251 and SR141716A (rimonabant), which are cannabinoid antagonists, and the
150  with an intracerebroventricular infusion of rimonabant while assessing glucose fluxes during a clamp
151 lment December 2004-December 2005) comparing rimonabant with placebo in 839 patients at 112 centers i
152 ute injection of the CB1 receptor antagonist rimonabant with the use of conditional CB1-knockout mice
153                          We assessed whether rimonabant would improve major vascular event-free survi

 
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