Naltrexone treatment increases the aversiveness of alcohol for outbred rats.
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] T. Silverstone,et al. Naloxone reduces the food intake of normal human volunteers , 1983, Appetite.
[2] L. D. Reid. Endogenous opioids and alcohol dependence: opioid alkaloids and the propensity to drink alcoholic beverages. , 1996, Alcohol.
[3] L. D. Reid,et al. Selected opioids, ethanol and intake of ethanol. , 1984, Alcohol.
[4] L. Pohorecky,et al. Naltrexone reverses ethanol-induced dopamine release in the nucleus accumbens in awake, freely moving rats , 1993, Brain Research.
[5] H. Grill,et al. The taste reactivity test. I. Mimetic responses to gustatory stimuli in neurologically normal rats , 1978, Brain Research.
[6] H. Samson,et al. Oral ethanol self-administration in the rat: Effect of naloxone , 1985, Pharmacology Biochemistry and Behavior.
[7] G. Di Chiara,et al. Blockade of delta-opioid receptors in the nucleus accumbens prevents ethanol-induced stimulation of dopamine release. , 1993, European journal of pharmacology.
[8] N. Badia-Elder,et al. Taste reactivity in high alcohol drinking and low alcohol drinking rats. , 1995, Alcoholism, clinical and experimental research.
[9] M. Apfelbaum,et al. Naltrexone suppresses hyperphagia induced in the rat by a highly palatable diet , 1981, Pharmacology Biochemistry and Behavior.
[10] S. Kiefer,et al. Taste reactivity to alcohol in rats. , 1989, Behavioral neuroscience.
[11] H. Samson,et al. Effects of morphine and naloxone on ethanol- and sucrose-reinforced responding in nondeprived rats. , 1992, Alcoholism, clinical and experimental research.
[12] H. Grill. PART II. PHYSIOLOGICAL SUBSTRATES OF CONDITIONED FOOD AVERSIONS: Introduction: Physiological Mechanisms in Conditioned Taste Aversions a , 1985 .
[13] M. Yeomans,et al. Lower pleasantness of palatable foods in nalmefene-treated human volunteers , 1991, Appetite.
[14] P. Hyytiä,et al. Responding for oral ethanol after naloxone treatment by alcohol-preferring AA rats. , 1993, Alcoholism, clinical and experimental research.
[15] J. Magnen,et al. Decrease in ethanol consumption by naloxone in naive and dependent rats , 1983, Pharmacology, Biochemistry and Behavior.
[16] J. Volpicelli,et al. Opiates and alcohol self-administration in animals. , 1995, The Journal of clinical psychiatry.
[17] S. Kiefer,et al. Evaluating the palatability of alcohol for rats with measures of taste reactivity, consumption, and lick rate. , 1992, Alcohol.
[18] L. D. Reid,et al. Opioidergic, serotonergic, and dopaminergic manipulations and rats' intake of a sweetened alcoholic beverage. , 1991, Alcohol.
[19] A. Kastin,et al. Naloxone, but not Tyr-MIF-1, reduces volitional ethanol drinking in rats: Correlation with degree of spontaneous preference , 1988, Pharmacology Biochemistry and Behavior.
[20] S. Kiefer,et al. Taste reactivity in alcohol preferring and nonpreferring rats. , 1990, Alcoholism, clinical and experimental research.
[21] N. Badia-Elder,et al. Alterations in taste reactivity to alcohol in rats given continuous alcohol access followed by abstinence. , 1994, Alcoholism, clinical and experimental research.
[22] C. X. Poulos,et al. The effects of selective blockade of delta and mu opiate receptors on ethanol consumption by C57BL/6 mice in a restricted access paradigm , 1993, Brain Research.
[23] L. D. Reid,et al. Morphine and naloxone modulate intake of ethanol. , 1984, Alcohol.