Publications by authors named "D Kocan"

We have shown that repeated administration of cocaine, as well as other drugs and nondrug stressors, can induce alternating increases and decreases in several neurotransmitter and endocrine endpoints, which we call oscillation. Oscillation studies have typically used 3-4 pretreatments with cocaine or other agents, raising the question of whether oscillation lasts beyond this point. Using plasma corticosterone as our endpoint measure, we therefore inquired whether oscillation would persist across eight administrations of cocaine over a 28-day period.

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Numerous inconsistencies in the reported effects of drugs that can be found in both the human clinical and animal experimental literatures have prompted attempts to identify the basis of this variability. Our data suggest that one source may derive from the tendency of many systems to oscillate in their response to repeated drug or stress exposure. In the first experiment a single administration of ethanol to male rats, either 2 or 30 minutes or 2 weeks before sacrifice suppressed amphetamine-induced dopamine efflux from striatal slices.

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Variability in response to drug treatment is a poorly understood problem with severe consequences for both the individual and the health care delivery system. Our data suggest that one source of variability may be inherent in the way physiological systems normally respond to repeated drug exposures. We report that for a wide array of endpoints-amphetamine-evoked, in vitro striatal dopamine efflux, amphetamine and K(+)-evoked efflux of heart norepinephrine and nonevoked plasma levels of corticosterone and glucose-repeated, in vivo cocaine (15 mg/kg IP) administration to male rats precipitated successive oscillations in the magnitude or direction of the organism's responsiveness to subsequent cocaine administration.

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