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Conditioned dopamine release in humans: a positron emission tomography [11C]raclopride study with amphetamine (CROSBI ID 143101)

Prilog u časopisu | izvorni znanstveni rad | međunarodna recenzija

Boileau, Isabelle ; Dagher, Alain ; Leyton, Marco ; Welfeld, Krzysztof ; Booij, Linda ; Dikšić, Mirko ; Benkelfat, Chawki Conditioned dopamine release in humans: a positron emission tomography [11C]raclopride study with amphetamine // Journal of neuroscience methods, 27 (2007), 15; 3998-4003. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4370-06.2007

Podaci o odgovornosti

Boileau, Isabelle ; Dagher, Alain ; Leyton, Marco ; Welfeld, Krzysztof ; Booij, Linda ; Dikšić, Mirko ; Benkelfat, Chawki

engleski

Conditioned dopamine release in humans: a positron emission tomography [11C]raclopride study with amphetamine

Studies in laboratory rodents suggest that previously neutral stimuli repeatedly paired with the administration of drugs of abuse can acquire the ability to increase striatal dopamine release. This conditioned neurochemical response is believed to prompt drug seeking in animals and has been hypothesized to contribute to drug craving and relapse in substance abusers. In the present study, we used positron emission tomography and [ 11C]raclopride to investigate whether amphetamine-predictive stimuli can elicit striatal dopamine release in humans. Nine healthy male volunteers received a capsule containing amphetamine tablets (0.3 mg/kg) on three separate occasions approximately every other day (mean SD, 2.25 1.13 d apart) in the same environment (scanner suite). At least 2 weeks later, the amphetamine was switched to a placebo of identical appearance and given in the same environmental context. [ 11C]Raclopride binding to dopamine D2/3 receptors was assessed after exposure to the first amphetamine-containing pill, after placebo administration, and during a control (no pill) scan. Relative to the control scan, amphetamine administration decreased [ 11C]raclopride binding potential by 22%in the ventral striatum and11%in the putamen. Placebo also decreased [ 11C]raclopride binding potential in the ventral striatum and did so with the same amplitude as amphetamine (23%). These results suggest that cues associated with amphetamine increase dopamine transmission, providing evidence that this system is involved in reward prediction in humans.

positron emission tomography; dopamine; amphetamine; conditioning; placebo; addiction

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Podaci o izdanju

27 (15)

2007.

3998-4003

objavljeno

0165-0270

10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4370-06.2007

Povezanost rada

Temeljne medicinske znanosti

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