Publications by authors named "I Dajic"

Article Synopsis
  • There’s a theory that suggests schizophrenia symptoms might get better with medicine that blocks certain dopamine receptors, but not everyone gets better.
  • Researchers studied 21 people who were just diagnosed with schizophrenia and hadn’t taken medication before to see how dopamine release affected their symptoms over a year.
  • They found that certain areas of the brain releasing more dopamine were linked to improvements in symptoms, helping to understand why some patients respond better to treatment than others.
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Introduction: Medications which target benzodiazepine (BZD) binding sites of GABAA receptors (GABAARs) have been in widespread use since the nineteen-sixties. They carry labels as anxiolytics, hypnotics or antiepileptics. All benzodiazepines and several nonbenzodiazepine Z-drugs share high affinity binding sites on certain subtypes of GABAA receptors, from which they can be displaced by the clinically used antagonist flumazenil.

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An elemental function of brain dopamine is to coordinate cognitive and motor resources for successful exploitation of environmental energy sources. Dopamine transmission, goal-directed behavior, and glucose homeostasis are altered in schizophrenia patients prior to and after initiation of pharmacological treatment. Thus, we investigated the relationship between blood glucose levels and brain dopamine signaling in drug-naïve patients with first-episode psychosis.

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