1999
DOI: 10.1002/(sici)1098-2396(199901)31:1<59::aid-syn8>3.3.co;2-p
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Comparable changes in synaptic dopamine induced by methylphenidate and by cocaine in the baboon brain

Abstract: Though the blockade of dopamine transporters (DAT) is associated with cocaine's and methylphenidate's reinforcing effects, it is the stimulation of dopamine (DA) receptors, achieved by increases in synaptic DA, that enables these effects to occur. Positron emission tomography (PET) and [11C]raclopride were used to assess the levels of occupancy of DA D2 receptors by dopamine achieved by doses of cocaine or methylphenidate previously documented to block over 70% of DAT. Studies were performed in five baboons us… Show more

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Cited by 26 publications
(46 citation statements)
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“…The temporal resolution that we report here may be sufficient to provide answers that have previously eluded researchers. For instance, PET investigators have compared the kinetics of cocaine and methylphenidate (Volkow et al, 1995;Volkow et al, 1999) and the effects of long-and short-acting methylphenidate (Spencer et al, 2006), and surmised that the speed of their respective dopamine responses may predict their addictive liabilities. However, it would be impossible to test this hypothesis with PET by measuring change in binding potential.…”
Section: A Temporal Precision Of Ntpetmentioning
confidence: 85%
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“…The temporal resolution that we report here may be sufficient to provide answers that have previously eluded researchers. For instance, PET investigators have compared the kinetics of cocaine and methylphenidate (Volkow et al, 1995;Volkow et al, 1999) and the effects of long-and short-acting methylphenidate (Spencer et al, 2006), and surmised that the speed of their respective dopamine responses may predict their addictive liabilities. However, it would be impossible to test this hypothesis with PET by measuring change in binding potential.…”
Section: A Temporal Precision Of Ntpetmentioning
confidence: 85%
“…NT parameters (Eq. 6) were selected such that the shape of F NT (t) resembled the release of dopamine (DA) in response to cocaine (based on (Volkow et al, 1999); see development in (Yoder et al, 2004)), a drug known to cause acute elevation of synaptic DA concentration. The magnitude of F NT (t) (peak value at 200% of baseline) was chosen to yield a change in BP (see below) less than 0.2, indicative of a modest effect on tracer binding.…”
Section: B Computer Simulations Of Pet Datamentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Indeed, intravenous MP, which induces fast DA increases (Volkow and Swanson, 2003), significantly increases cocaine craving in cocaine abusers even when administered in a laboratory setting devoid of cocaine cues (Volkow et al, 1997). The craving in this case may occur because the fast and large DA increases induced by intravenous MP are equivalent to the DA increases induced by intravenous cocaine (Volkow et al, 1999b), producing an internal state that is a powerful and recognizable cocaine-related cue.The dynamic characteristics of the DA increases are known to modulate the reinforcing effects of stimulant drugs, fast DA increases are associated with reward whereas slow increases are not (Volkow and Swanson, 2003). This is consistent with the involvement of "phasic" DA cell firing (induces a large transient DA increase), rather than "tonic" DA cell firing (induces stable DA levels), in encoding for reward and reward prediction (Grace et al, 2007).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%