2016
Human Laboratory Studies on Cannabinoids and Psychosis
Sherif M, Radhakrishnan R, D’Souza D, Ranganathan M. Human Laboratory Studies on Cannabinoids and Psychosis. Biological Psychiatry 2016, 79: 526-538. PMID: 26970363, DOI: 10.1016/j.biopsych.2016.01.011.BooksConceptsCannabinoid agonistsPsychotomimetic effectsAcute psychotomimetic effectsHealthy control subjectsCrossover laboratory studyEffects of ketamineHuman laboratory studiesGamma-aminobutyric acidHealthy human subjectsSelf-medication hypothesisTransient exacerbationAntipsychotic medicationControl subjectsDopamine metabolismGlutamate systemDopamine releasePsychotomimetic drugsCognitive symptomsDrug AdministrationAgonistsMagnitude of effectSymptomsSchizophreniaCannabinoidsLaboratory studies
1999
[123I]Iomazenil SPECT benzodiazepine receptor imaging in schizophrenia
Verhoeff N, Soares J, D’Souza C, Gil R, Degen K, Abi-Dargham A, Zoghbi S, Fujita M, Rajeevan N, Seibyl J, Krystal J, van Dyck C, Charney D, Innis R. [123I]Iomazenil SPECT benzodiazepine receptor imaging in schizophrenia. Psychiatry Research 1999, 91: 163-173. PMID: 10641580, DOI: 10.1016/s0925-4927(99)00027-x.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsDuration of illnessHealthy control subjectsControl subjectsGamma-aminobutyric acidLeft precentral gyrusSuperior occipital gyrusPANSS scoresPrecentral gyrusOccipital gyrusSignificant differencesTotal brain uptakeNon-smoking patientsGray matter atrophyConstant infusion paradigmPathophysiology of schizophreniaCortical brain regionsSingle photon emissionTypical antipsychoticsAtypical antipsychoticsCigarette smokingInhibitory neurotransmissionBrain uptakeInfusion paradigmMatter atrophyPostmortem studies