Publications by authors named "James E Polston"

Opioid use rates have dropped as North American patients gain access to medical cannabis, indicating a harm reduction role, yet health outcomes remain mostly unexplored. This study presents self-reported medical cannabis use, perceptions of health functioning, and changes in opioid pain medication use in Florida medical cannabis patients. Patients (n = 2,183) recruited from medical dispensaries across Florida completed a 66-item cross-sectional survey that included demographic, health, and medication usage items, along with items from the Medical Outcomes Survey (SF-36) to assess health functioning before and after cannabis initiation.

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Roux-en-Y gastric bypass surgery (RYGB) is an effective treatment for severe obesity. Clinical studies however have reported susceptibility to increased alcohol use after RYGB, and preclinical studies have shown increased alcohol intake in obese rats after RYGB. This could reflect a direct enhancement of alcohol's rewarding effects in the brain or an indirect effect due to increased alcohol absorption after RGYB.

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Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (RYGB) is one of the most successful treatments for severe obesity and associated comorbidities. One potential adverse outcome, however, is increased risk for alcohol use. As such, we tested whether RYGB alters motivation to self-administer alcohol in outbred dietary obese rats, and investigated the involvement of the ghrelin system as a potential underlying mechanism.

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Lobeline has high affinity for nicotinic receptors and alters presynaptic dopamine storage and release in brain. Moreover, lobeline decreases the reinforcing and locomotor-activating properties of methamphetamine, suggesting that lobeline may be a pharmacotherapy for psychostimulant abuse. This study determined if lobeline alters cocaine-induced hyperactivity and if lobeline alters the induction and/or expression of sensitization to cocaine.

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Lobeline has high affinity for nicotinic acetylcholine receptors and inhibits the function of vesicular and plasmalemmal monoamine transporters. Moreover, lobeline has been shown to alter the neurochemical and behavioral effects of psychostimulants. The present study determined the effect of lobeline and drugs selective for nicotinic receptors on the discriminative stimulus properties of low doses of cocaine (1.

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