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Amphetamine withdrawal from

Garden City, NY, Medical Examination Publishing, 1981 Snyder SH, Faillace L 2,3-Dimethoxy-4-methyl-amphetamine (STP) a new hallucinogenic drug. Science 1388 669-670, 1967 Spielewoy C, Markou A Withdrawal from chronic phencyclidine treatment induces long-lasting depression in brain reward function. Neuropsychopharmacology 28 1106-1116,2003... [Pg.241]

Amphetamine effects on aggression are markedly modulated by opiates and opioid peptides. Withdrawal from prolonged exposure to opiates may lead to increased defensive and aggressive responses in mice and rats and increased hostility in humans (Lai et al. 1971 Gossop and Roy 1976 ... [Pg.81]

Kantak and Miczek 1986). Amphetamine and cocaine, as well as dopaminergic agonists, increase further the already high levels of defensive responses in aggregated rats undergoing withdrawal from opiates, leading in extreme cases to the death of the subjects (Lai et al. 1971 Puri and Lai 1973). [Pg.81]

The treatment goals for withdrawal from ethanol, cocaine/ amphetamines, and opioids include (1) a determination if pharmacologic treatment of withdrawal symptoms is necessary, (2) management of medical manifestations of withdrawal such as hypertension, seizures, arthralgias, and nausea, and (3) referral to the appropriate program for substance abuse treatment. [Pg.525]

Crippens, Donita, and Terry E. Robinson. 1994. "Withdrawal from Morphine or Amphetamine Different Effects on Dopamine in the Ventral-Medial Striatum Studied with Microdialysis." Brain Research 650 56-62. [Pg.96]

Wise, Roy A., and Elizabeth Munn. 1995. "Withdrawal from Chronic Amphetamine Elevates Baseline Intracranial Self-Stimulation Thresholds." Psychopharmacology 117 130-36. [Pg.118]

Withdrawal from chronic amphetamine abuse can be long and difficult. Also, it results in depression and at least two of the following symptoms fatigue, vivid dreams, irregular sleep patterns, increased appetite, and psychomotor problems. [Pg.142]

The nature of the withdrawal symptoms depends upon the neurotransmitter systems which are the target of the drug. Thus cocaine and the amphetamines alleviate fatigue, cause anorexia and elevate mood withdrawal therefore results in feelings of fatigue, hyperphagia and depression. Abrupt withdrawal from the sedatives, such as barbiturates or following... [Pg.377]

Among the many toxicants that cause convulsions are chlorinated hydrocarbons, amphetamines, lead, organophosphates, and strychnine. There are several levels of coma, the term used to describe a lowered level of consciousness. At level 0, the subject may be awakened and will respond to questions. At level 1, withdrawal from painful stimuli is observed and all reflexes function. A subject at level 2 does not withdraw from painful stimuli, although most reflexes still function. Levels 3 and 4 are characterized by the absence of reflexes at level 4, respiratory action is depressed and the cardiovascular system fails. Among the many toxicants that cause coma are narcotic analgesics, alcohols, organophosphates, carbamates, lead, hydrocarbons, hydrogen sulfide, benzodiazepines, tricyclic antidepressants, isoniazid, phenothiazines, and opiates. [Pg.154]

The literature on a withdrawal syndrome (SEDA-10, 17) has been expanded by further reports. One of these (33) involved the development of an acute toxic delirium 3 days after withdrawal of phenelzine, and another (34) concerned patients who became manic after withdrawal of isocarboxazid. A withdrawal state similar to that caused by withdrawal from amphetamines has been described after withdrawal of tranylcypromine (SEDA-16, 8) (SEDA-18,14). [Pg.80]

Cocaine is usually legally classified as an addictive drug though withdrawal doesn t cause the abstinence syndrome seen in junkies. Cocaine withdrawal causes symptoms similar to those seen in withdrawal from amphetamines — depression, fetigue and listlessness. [Pg.8]

Disorientation, lethargy, and craving are signs of withdrawal from a stimulant, such as crack cocaine and amphetamines. [Pg.317]


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