TY - JOUR
T1 - Clinical neuropharmacology of drugs of abuse
T2 - a comparison of drug-discrimination and subject-report measures.
AU - Kelly, Thomas H.
AU - Stoops, William W.
AU - Perry, Andrea S.
AU - Prendergast, Mark A.
AU - Rush, Craig R.
PY - 2003/12
Y1 - 2003/12
N2 - Advances in molecular pharmacology and behavioral science have helped elucidate the structure and function of the central nervous system and its relationship to behavior and has sparked the development of pharmacological agents that have increasingly selective and potent effects with fewer adverse side effects. The sensitivity and predictive validity of the two most commonly used methodologies for assessing the neuropharmacological effects of centrally active drugs, subject report of drug effects and drug discrimination, were examined. The sensitivity of the measures was comparable across stimulant, sedative, and opioid drugs. Results with drug-discrimination methodologies were generally consistent with hypothesized neuropharmacological mechanisms across all drug classes, whereas subject reports conformed under more limited testing conditions. Firm conclusions regarding the relative utility of drug-discrimination and subject-report measures for clinical studies of neuropharmacological mechanisms are limited by the small number of studies in which the two methodologies have been tested using identical pharmacological pretreatment manipulations.
AB - Advances in molecular pharmacology and behavioral science have helped elucidate the structure and function of the central nervous system and its relationship to behavior and has sparked the development of pharmacological agents that have increasingly selective and potent effects with fewer adverse side effects. The sensitivity and predictive validity of the two most commonly used methodologies for assessing the neuropharmacological effects of centrally active drugs, subject report of drug effects and drug discrimination, were examined. The sensitivity of the measures was comparable across stimulant, sedative, and opioid drugs. Results with drug-discrimination methodologies were generally consistent with hypothesized neuropharmacological mechanisms across all drug classes, whereas subject reports conformed under more limited testing conditions. Firm conclusions regarding the relative utility of drug-discrimination and subject-report measures for clinical studies of neuropharmacological mechanisms are limited by the small number of studies in which the two methodologies have been tested using identical pharmacological pretreatment manipulations.
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U2 - 10.1177/1534582303262095
DO - 10.1177/1534582303262095
M3 - Review article
C2 - 15006288
AN - SCOPUS:2342510931
SN - 1534-5823
VL - 2
SP - 227
EP - 260
JO - Behavioral and Cognitive Neuroscience Reviews
JF - Behavioral and Cognitive Neuroscience Reviews
IS - 4
ER -