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Keyword: dopamine

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  • SLU Research Implicates Natural Toxin as Triggering Parkinson’s Disease

    02/10/2011 7:29:33 PM PST · by decimon · 8 replies
    February 10, 2011 | Carrie Bebermeyer
    nvestigators Build a Case Linking Chemical DOPAL to Illness In new research from Saint Louis University, investigators have found evidence that a toxin produced by the brain is responsible for the series of cellular events that lead to Parkinson's disease. The study, published in PLoS One, found that the brain toxin DOPAL plays a key role in killing the dopamine neurons which trigger the illness. In earlier research, Saint Louis University investigators found that DOPAL seemed to be responsible for killing healthy dopamine cells, which in turn causes Parkinson disease to develop. Now, research in an animal model gives them...
  • Risk takers, drug abusers driven by decreased ability to process dopamine

    12/30/2008 5:40:45 PM PST · by CE2949BB · 5 replies · 395+ views
    Science Codex ^ | December 30, 2008
    NASHVILLE, Tenn.--For risk-takers and impulsive people, New Year's resolutions often include being more careful, spending more frugally and cutting back on dangerous behavior, such as drug use. But new research from Vanderbilt finds that these individuals--labeled as novelty seekers by psychologists--face an uphill battle in keeping their New Year's resolutions due to the way their brains process dopamine. The research reveals that novelty seekers have less of a particular type of dopamine receptor, which may lead them to seek out novel and exciting experiences--such as spending lavishly, taking risks and partying like there's no tomorrow.
  • Big Sugar Won't Like This Princeton Study On Addiction

    12/23/2008 4:43:51 AM PST · by CE2949BB · 5 replies · 931+ views
    Scientific Blogging ^ | December 21st 2008
    Almost anything can be considered colloquially 'addictive' if you like it enough - computer games, Reese's Peant Butter Cups, reading Scientific Blogging articles and the best science blogs on the planet. Clinical addiction is another issue, though, and Princeton University Professor Bart Hoebel and his team in the Department of Psychology and the Princeton Neuroscience Institute say they have evidence that sugar can be an addictive substance, wielding its power over the brains of lab animals in a manner similar to many drugs of abuse. So now sugar addiction can overtake "I have a thyroid condition" as the number one...
  • Researchers sniff out Parkinson's breakthrough

    06/29/2008 5:16:42 PM PDT · by Coleus · 2 replies · 95+ views
    abc ^ | 06.16.08
    Australian scientists have discovered that stem cells found in the back of a patient's nose can produce the chemical which is missing in people with Parkinson's disease. Parkinson's disease occurs when the brain cells that produce the chemical dopamine stop working.  Without dopamine, nerve cells cannot function, leading to muscle problems. Researchers from Griffith University and the University of Queensland harvested adult stem cells from the noses of Parkinson's disease patients.  They found that once the nose cells were cultured and infused into animals with Parkinson's disease, the cells began to produce dopamine.  Professor Peter Silburn from the University of...
  • Woman Claims Medication Fueled Gambling Addiction

    07/20/2006 7:23:50 PM PDT · by Extremely Extreme Extremist · 24 replies · 1,050+ views
    CBS2CHICAGO ^ | July 19, 2006 | Mary Ann Childers
    Some Question Unusual Side Effects Of Dopamine Agonists (CBS) CHICAGO A new group of drugs called dopamine agonists are offering help to some people with Parkinson's disease and restless leg syndrome. But as CBS 2 Medical Editor Mary Ann Childers reports, complaints of unusual side effects have some questioning if this is a risky remedy. Barbara Hermansen suffered from chronic insomnia caused by restless leg syndrome until her doctor prescribed a drug called Permax. It helped her sleep like a baby, but she says five years later, it turned her life into a nightmare. "Gambling was always in my brain,"...
  • The science behind shopper's rush, and how not to fall victim

    12/12/2005 2:19:50 PM PST · by Ben Mugged · 22 replies · 477+ views
    The Telegraph ^ | Dec 11 2005 | Philip Sherwell and James Orr
    The feeling will be familiar to millions at this time of year: a surge of excitement as they find that must-have item in the shops, followed by a sickening sense of let-down shortly afterwards. It may be some relief to discover that scientists know why it happens and can now provide some pointers to avoiding it. The feeling is caused by the release of a specific chemical in the brain, studies have found. Dopamine, a chemical associated with pleasure, is released in waves as shoppers first see a product and then consider buying it. But the research shows that it...
  • Wakefulness Finds a Powerful Ally

    06/29/2004 1:31:20 PM PDT · by neverdem · 20 replies · 2,377+ views
    NY Times ^ | June 29, 2004 | ANAHAD O'CONNOR
    Laurie Coots, a marketing executive who flies to meetings in other countries twice a week, spent years trying to conquer sleepless nights and chronic jet lag. But nothing worked, she says, and every day was a struggle to stay awake. "It was debilitating," said Ms. Coots, 46, who is from Los Angeles. "I couldn't give an effective presentation because I was always shaky and nervous from being amped up on caffeine and stimulants." Then she found modafinil, a small white pill that revs up the central nervous system without the jitteriness of caffeine or the addiction and euphoria of amphetamines....