Article
Effect of dopamine receptor antagonists on cocaine subjective effects: A naturalistic case study

https://doi.org/10.1016/S0740-5472(96)00161-4Get rights and content

Abstract

Schizophrenic patients on neuroleptic medications abuse cocaine and report cocaine-induced euphoria. This study was undertaken to provide better clinical characterization of these phenomena by administering the POMS and a custom-designed questionnaire. A group of heavy cocaine users who were not mentally ill served as the control group. The results clearly suggest that schizophrenic patients report cocaine-induced euphoria and post-use craving despite being treated with therapeutic doses of haloperidol or fluphenazine. The responses of the control group were similar to that of the schizophrenic group except that the latter subjects reported a greater degree of anxiety. These results suggest that blockade of D2 receptors is not sufficient to block cocaine-induced subjective effects in humans.

Keywords

human
cocaine abuse
dopamine receptor antagonists

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The PMRTP program of the American Psychiatric Association supported Donald C. Ohuoha MD, MPH during the first part of this project. Teri Gendron and Diane Lafko provided superb technical assistance for the portion of this project carried out at the Addiction Research Center.

Portions of this work were carried out when Dr. Ohuoha was at the Department of Psychiatry, St. Elizabeths Hospital Washington, DC 20032 and the Neuropathology Section, Clinical Brain Disorders Branch, IRP, NIMH, Neuroscience Center at St. Elizabeth's Washington, DC 20032.

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