0000000000544372

AUTHOR

Vicente Hernández-rabaza

showing 7 related works from this author

What Is the “Trigger” of Addiction?

2020

Este artículo se encuentra disponible en la siguiente URL: https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fnbeh.2020.00054/full

medicine.medical_specialtyOpinionfrustrationCognitive Neurosciencemedia_common.quotation_subjectMEDLINElcsh:RC321-571Behavioral NeuroscienceTratamiento.Adicciones.medicineFrustración.Psychiatrylcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. NeuropsychiatryFrustration.media_commonCompulsive behavior.treatmentAddictionPsicopatología.triggerNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyCompulsive behaviorTherapeutics.addictionmedicine.symptomPsychology Pathological.PsychologysubjectiveFrontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience
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The hippocampal dentate gyrus is essential for generating contextual memories of fear and drug-induced reward

2008

The hippocampus is believed to play a role in processing information relative to the context in which emotionally salient experiences occur but evidence on the specific contribution of the hippocampal dentate gyrus (DG) to these processes is limited. Here, we have used two classical behavioral paradigms to study the participation of the dorsal DG in context-conditioned reward and context-conditioned fear. Rats received intra-hippocampal vehicle or colchicine injections (4 μg/μl solution; 0.2 μl injections at 10 sites) that damaged the DG but spared other hippocampal subfields. In the first experiment, we used a place conditioning procedure pairing cocaine exposure (20 mg/kg, i.p.) with a sp…

MaleCognitive NeuroscienceConditioning ClassicalHippocampusExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyContext (language use)Hippocampal formationHippocampusBehavioral NeuroscienceCocaineRewardAnimalsRats Long-EvansFear conditioningAnalysis of VarianceDentate gyrusAssociation LearningRetention PsychologyFearConditioned place preferenceRatsDentate GyrusExploratory BehaviorConditioningAnalysis of variancePsychologyNeuroscienceCentral Nervous System Agents
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Neurotoxicity and persistent cognitive deficits induced by combined MDMA and alcohol exposure in adolescent rats

2010

Recent trend assessments of drug consumption reveal an increase in the simultaneous use of several drugs at raves, clubs and college settings among youngsters and young adults. We studied in adolescent rats the effects of repeated exposure to cocaine and 3,4-methylenedioxymethanphetamine (MDMA, ecstasy), given alone or in combination with alcohol, on memory performance, adult hippocampal neurogenesis and neurotoxicity. Rats were trained two weeks after the drug treatments in the radial arm maze. The results showed that only rats exposed to combinations of alcohol and MDMA exhibited significant memory deficits. Alcohol, MDMA and combinations thereof significantly decreased 5-bromodeoxyuridin…

Pharmacologymedicine.medical_specialtyeducation.field_of_studyRadial arm mazebiologyDentate gyrusPopulationNeurogenesisNeurotoxicityMedicine (miscellaneous)MDMAmedicine.diseaseDoublecortinSubgranular zonePsychiatry and Mental healthEndocrinologymedicine.anatomical_structureInternal medicinemedicinebiology.proteineducationPsychologyNeurosciencemedicine.drugAddiction Biology
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Binge administration of 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine ("ecstasy") impairs the survival of neural precursors in adult rat dentate gyrus.

2006

3,4-Methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA) is a potent stimulant and hallucinogenic drug whose ability to regulate neurogenesis in the adult has not been previously investigated. We used 5'-bromo-2-deoxyuridine (BrdU) and Ki-67 as mitotic markers, and doublecortin (DCX) as a marker of immature neurons, to study proliferation, survival and maturation of adult-generated cells in the dentate gyrus (DG) of the hippocampus following binge administration of MDMA (8 injections of 5 mg/kg at 6 h intervals). The results showed that MDMA treatment did not affect cytogenesis in the DG, but significantly decreased the survival rate of cells incorporated after 2 weeks to the granular layer of the DG by ca…

HallucinogenDoublecortin Domain ProteinsMalemedicine.medical_specialtyDoublecortin ProteinCell SurvivalN-Methyl-34-methylenedioxyamphetamineHippocampusCellular and Molecular NeuroscienceInternal medicinemedicineAnimalsProgenitor cellRats WistarPharmacologyNeuronsAnalysis of VariancebiologyBehavior AnimalDentate gyrusStem CellsNeurogenesisNeuropeptidesColocalizationMDMACell DifferentiationImmunohistochemistryDoublecortinRatsEndocrinologyKi-67 Antigennervous systemBromodeoxyuridineDentate Gyrusbiology.proteinHallucinogensNeuroscienceMicrotubule-Associated Proteinsmedicine.drugNeuropharmacology
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Chronic cocaine exposure impairs progenitor proliferation but spares survival and maturation of neural precursors in adult rat dentate gyrus

2006

Recent observations indicate that drugs of abuse, including alcohol and opiates, impair adult neurogenesis in the hippocampus. We have studied in rats the impact of cocaine treatment (20 mg/kg, daily, i.p.) on cell proliferation, survival and maturation following short-term (8-day) and long-term (24-day) exposure. Using 5'-bromo-2-deoxyuridine (BrdU) and Ki-67 as mitotic markers at the end of the drug treatments, we found that both short- and long-term cocaine exposures significantly reduced cell proliferation in the dentate gyrus (DG) of the hippocampus. By labelling mitotic cells with BrdU pulses before or during the early stages of the drug treatment, we determined that long-term cocaine…

Doublecortin Domain ProteinsMalemedicine.medical_specialtyDoublecortin ProteinCell SurvivalDown-RegulationMitosisHippocampusBiologyHippocampal formationDrug Administration ScheduleCocaine-Related DisordersCocaineDopamine Uptake InhibitorsInternal medicinemedicineAnimalsRats WistarCell ShapeCell ProliferationNeuronsTUNEL assayStem CellsGeneral NeuroscienceDentate gyrusNeuropeptidesNeurogenesisColocalizationCell DifferentiationRatsDoublecortinDisease Models AnimalKi-67 AntigenEndocrinologymedicine.anatomical_structureBromodeoxyuridineChronic DiseaseDentate GyrusMossy Fibers Hippocampalbiology.proteinCognition DisordersMicrotubule-Associated ProteinsNeuroscienceStratum lucidumEuropean Journal of Neuroscience
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The dopamine uptake inhibitor 3 alpha-[bis(4'-fluorophenyl)metoxy]-tropane reduces cocaine-induced early-gene expression, locomotor activity, and con…

2009

Benztropine (BZT) analogs, a family of high-affinity dopamine transporter ligands, are molecules that exhibit pharmacological and behavioral characteristics predictive of significant therapeutic potential in cocaine addiction. Here, we examined in mice the effects of 3 alpha-[bis(4'-fluorophenyl)metoxy]-tropane (AHN-1055) on motor activity, conditioned place preference (CPP) and c-Fos expression in the striatum. AHN-1055 produced mild attenuation of spontaneous locomotor activity at a low dose (1 mg/kg) and weak stimulation at a higher dose (10 mg/kg). In parallel, the BZT analog significantly increased c-Fos expression in the dorsolateral caudoputamen at the high dose, whereas producing ma…

MaleNomifensineConditioning ClassicalAHN-1055cocaineGene ExpressionStimulationStriatumBZT derivativeNucleus accumbensPharmacologyplace preferenceMotor ActivityCocaine-Related DisordersMiceCocaineDopamine Uptake InhibitorsRewardDopaminemedicineAnimalsDopamine transporterPharmacologyBenztropinec-FosbiologyDose-Response Relationship DrugChemistryVentral striatumBrainConditioned place preferencePsychiatry and Mental healthNomifensinemedicine.anatomical_structureSpace Perceptionbiology.proteinStereotyped Behaviorlocomotor activityNeuroscienceProto-Oncogene Proteins c-fosmedicine.drugNeuropsychopharmacology : official publication of the American College of Neuropsychopharmacology
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Spared place and object-place learning but limited spatial working memory capacity in rats with selective lesions of the dentate gyrus

2007

We studied the cognitive performance of rats with colchicine-induced lesions of the hippocampal dentate gyrus (DG) on a range of spatial, non-spatial and mixed spatial/procedural tasks. Rats were assigned to three experimental groups receiving large colchicine lesions (7 μg per hippocampus), small colchicine lesions (1.75 μg per hippocampus) or sham lesions. Stereological estimates of cell density indicated that the colchicine treatments induced dose-dependent damage to the DG, while sparing in large part other hippocampal subfields. Remarkably, the behavioural results showed that the colchicine lesions did not affect the performance of rats in an object discrimination task, in an object-pl…

MalehippocampusStatistics as TopicHippocampusCell CountHippocampal formationNeuropsychological TestsSpatial memoryworking memoryobject recognitioncolchicineTask (project management)LesionDiscrimination PsychologicalRewardmedicineAnimalsRats Long-EvansEffects of sleep deprivation on cognitive performancedentate gyrusMaze LearningAnalysis of VarianceWorking memoryGeneral NeuroscienceDentate gyrusspatial memoryplace recognitionRatsMemory Short-TermSpace PerceptionDentate GyrusExploratory BehaviorConditioning Operantmedicine.symptomPsychologyNeuroscienceCognitive psychology
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