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Self Administration (Administration, Self)

577  relevant articles (19 outcomes, 89 trials/studies) found for this Therapy

Description: Administration of a drug or chemical by the individual under the direction of a physician. It includes administration clinically or experimentally, by human or animal.

Also Known As:
Administration, Self; Administrations, Self; Self Administrations

Relationship Network

Therapy Context: Research Results

Experts

1. Cubells, Joseph F: 2 articles (06/2007 - 02/2006)
2. Malison, Robert T: 2 articles (06/2007 - 02/2006)
3. Gueorguieva, Ralitza: 2 articles (06/2007 - 02/2006)
4. Kalayasiri, Rasmon: 2 articles (06/2007 - 02/2006)
5. Sughondhabirom, Atapol: 2 articles (06/2007 - 02/2006)
6. Coric, Vladimir: 2 articles (06/2007 - 02/2006)
7. Lynch, Wendy J: 2 articles (06/2007 - 02/2006)
8. Brady, Anne Marie: 1 article (10/2008)
9. Ewan, Eric: 1 article (10/2008)
10. McCallum, Sarah E: 1 article (10/2008)

Related Diseases

1. Substance-Related Disorders (Drug Abuse)
04/01/2001 - "CONCLUSIONS: The data of this study are consistent with the view that hypnotic self-administration by insomniacs is therapy-seeking behavior and not drug abuse."
09/01/1998 - "The uniform observation of predominant inhibition among the various electrophysiology studies is consistent with the heuristic value of anesthetized and slice recording methods in identifying potential neurophysiological correlates of drug taking; however, the existence of firing patterns (e.g., phasic increases) uniquely associated with self-administration behavior (and thus absent in anesthetized and slice studies), as well as the unique presence of the primary behavior of interest in studies such as the present one, underscores the importance of conducting electrophysiological investigations of drug taking and drug addiction in the self-administering animal in parallel with anesthetized and slice studies whenever possible."
12/19/1997 - "Further, because acquisition of drug self-administration is an animal model of vulnerability to drug addiction, these inbred strains may be useful to study factors underlying such vulnerability."
05/01/1997 - "Although accumbens DA is important for drug abuse phenomena, particularly stimulant self-administration, studies that involve other reinforcers are more problematic"
10/01/1994 - "To investigate new approaches for treatment of drug abuse, subcutaneous vascular ports were implanted in rhesus monkeys (Macaca mulatta) for use in drug self-administration studies"
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2. Cocaine-Related Disorders (Cocaine Addiction)
3. Pain (Aches)
4. Body Weight (Weight, Body)
5. Alcoholism (Alcohol Abuse)

Related Drugs and Biologics

1. Cocaine (Cocaine HCl)
2. Ethanol (Ethyl Alcohol)
3. Morphine (MS Contin)
4. Nicotine
5. Heroin (Diamorphine)
6. Dopamine Agonists (Dopamine Agonist)
7. Naloxone (Narcan)
8. Nitrous Oxide (Laughing Gas)
9. Dopamine D1 Receptors (Dopamine D1 Receptor)
10. Chloroquine (Aralen)

Related Therapies and Procedures

1. Analgesia
2. Drug Therapy (Chemotherapy)
3. Patient-Controlled Analgesia (Analgesia, Patient Controlled)
4. Chemoprevention
5. Self Medication

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