2008
Ethanol-like effects of thiopental and ketamine in healthy humans
Dickerson D, Pittman B, Ralevski E, Perrino A, Limoncelli D, Edgecombe J, Acampora G, Krystal J, Petrakis I. Ethanol-like effects of thiopental and ketamine in healthy humans. Journal Of Psychopharmacology 2008, 24: 203-211. PMID: 19028835, PMCID: PMC4484757, DOI: 10.1177/0269881108098612.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsEthanol-like effectsEthanol-related effectsNMDA receptor antagonistBlock NMDA receptorsNMDA receptor antagonismSeparate test daysGamma-aminobutyric acidReceptor antagonismSubanesthetic dosesReceptor antagonistNMDA receptorsFamily historyEthanol intoxicationHealthy humansPharmacological agentsEthanol effectsKetamineReceptor activityReceptor functionLarger studyBehavioral effectsThiopentalIntoxicationSubjective intoxicationTest day
2007
Absence of Significant Interactive Effects of High‐Dose d‐Cycloserine and Ethanol in Healthy Human Subjects: Preliminary Insights Into Ethanol Actions at the GlycineB Site of NMDA Glutamate Receptors
Trevisan L, Petrakis IL, Pittman B, Gueorguieva R, D’Souza D, Perry E, Limoncelli D, Krystal JH. Absence of Significant Interactive Effects of High‐Dose d‐Cycloserine and Ethanol in Healthy Human Subjects: Preliminary Insights Into Ethanol Actions at the GlycineB Site of NMDA Glutamate Receptors. Alcohol Clinical And Experimental Research 2007, 32: 36-42. PMID: 18028532, DOI: 10.1111/j.1530-0277.2007.00543.x.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsCo-agonist siteHealthy human subjectsEthanol administrationD-cycloserineHigh-dose d-cycloserineAlcohol levelsReceptor functionPlacebo 4 hoursDouble-blind conditionsNMDA receptor functionNMDA glutamate receptorsMild sedative effectDoses of ethanolGlutamate receptor functionBreath alcohol levelsHuman subjectsVerbal fluencyGlycineB siteGroups of subjectsEthanol antagonismCombination of ethanolSedative effectsNMDA receptorsClinical significanceGlutamate receptors
2004
Altered NMDA Glutamate Receptor Antagonist Response in Individuals With a Family Vulnerability to Alcoholism
Petrakis IL, Limoncelli D, Gueorguieva R, Jatlow P, Boutros NN, Trevisan L, Gelernter J, Krystal JH. Altered NMDA Glutamate Receptor Antagonist Response in Individuals With a Family Vulnerability to Alcoholism. American Journal Of Psychiatry 2004, 161: 1776-1782. PMID: 15465973, DOI: 10.1176/ajp.161.10.1776.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchAdultAffectAlcohol DrinkingAlcoholic IntoxicationAlcoholismBrief Psychiatric Rating ScaleDissociative DisordersDouble-Blind MethodEthanolFamilyFemaleGenetic Predisposition to DiseaseHumansInfusions, IntravenousKetamineMalePedigreePlacebosPsychoses, AlcoholicReceptors, N-Methyl-D-AspartateRisk Factors
2003
NMDA Receptor Antagonism and the Ethanol Intoxication Signal
KRYSTAL JH, PETRAKIS IL, KRUPITSKY E, SCHÜTZ C, TREVISAN L, D'SOUZA DC. NMDA Receptor Antagonism and the Ethanol Intoxication Signal. Annals Of The New York Academy Of Sciences 2003, 1003: 176-184. PMID: 14684445, DOI: 10.1196/annals.1300.010.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAlcoholic IntoxicationAlcoholismAnimalsEthanolExcitatory Amino Acid AntagonistsHumansKetaminePhenotypeReceptors, N-Methyl-D-Aspartate
1998
Dose-Related Ethanol-like Effects of the NMDA Antagonist, Ketamine, in Recently Detoxified Alcoholics
Krystal JH, Petrakis IL, Webb E, Cooney NL, Karper LP, Namanworth S, Stetson P, Trevisan LA, Charney DS. Dose-Related Ethanol-like Effects of the NMDA Antagonist, Ketamine, in Recently Detoxified Alcoholics. JAMA Psychiatry 1998, 55: 354-360. PMID: 9554431, DOI: 10.1001/archpsyc.55.4.354.Peer-Reviewed Original Research
1995
Noradrenergic response to acute ethanol administration in heathly subjects: comparison with intravenous yohimbine
McDougle C, Price L, Heninger G, Krystal J, Charney D. Noradrenergic response to acute ethanol administration in heathly subjects: comparison with intravenous yohimbine. Psychopharmacology 1995, 118: 127-135. PMID: 7617798, DOI: 10.1007/bf02245830.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsAcute ethanol administrationEthanol administrationPlasma MHPGIntravenous yohimbineBlood pressureNE turnoverSystolic blood pressureAlpha2-adrenergic receptorsPlacebo-controlled designBlood pressure measurementsEthanol-induced increaseHealthy human subjectsClear additive effectSubjective measuresNE metabolismNoradrenergic responsesNorepinephrine metaboliteCombined administrationMHPG responsePlasma levelsPharmacokinetic effectsOral administrationIntravenous administrationAnxiogenic effectsEthanol intoxication