Publications by authors named "John H Kehne"

Cannabidiol (CBD) is a cannabinoid component of marijuana that has no significant activity at cannabinoid receptors or psychoactive effects. There is considerable interest in CBD as a therapy for epilepsy. Almost a third of epilepsy patients are not adequately controlled by clinically available anti-seizure drugs (ASDs).

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For over 40 years, the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke/National Institutes of Health-funded Anticonvulsant Screening Program has provided a preclinical screening service for participants world-wide that helped identify/characterize new antiseizure compounds, a number of which advanced to the market for the treatment of epilepsy. The newly-renamed Epilepsy Therapy Screening Program (ETSP) has a refocused mission to identify novel agents which will help address the considerable remaining unmet medical needs in epilepsy. These include identifying antiseizure agents for treatment-resistant epilepsy, as well as anti-epileptogenic agents that will prevent the development of epilepsy or disease-modifying agents that will ameliorate or even cure established epilepsy and its comorbidities.

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This study examined the effect of vilazodone, a combined serotonin (5-HT) reuptake inhibitor and 5-HT(1A) receptor partial agonist, paroxetine and fluoxetine on the sensitivity of 5-HT(1A) autoreceptors of serotonergic dorsal raphe nucleus neurons in rats. These effects were assessed by determining the intravenous dose of (±)-8-hydroxy-2-(di-n-propylamino)-tetralin (8-OH-DPAT) required to suppress the basal firing rate of these neurons by 50% (ID₅₀) in anesthetized rats using in vivo electrophysiology. 5-HT uptake inhibition was determined by the ability of the compounds to reverse (±)-p-chloroamphetamine (PCA)-induced rat hypothalamic 5-HT depletion ex vivo.

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Pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics, safety, and tolerability of inhaled zaleplon were assessed in healthy volunteers. Forty participants received 0.5, 1, 2, or 4 mg zaleplon or placebo as a thermally generated aerosol in a randomized, double-blind, parallel-group, dose escalation study.

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Introduction: Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a chronic debilitating psychiatric disorder resulting from exposure to a severe traumatic stressor and an area of great unmet medical need. Advances in pharmacological treatments beyond the currently approved SSRIs are needed.

Areas Covered: Background on PTSD, as well as the neurobiology of stress responding and fear conditioning, is provided.

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Objective: The present study evaluated inhaled loxapine for the acute treatment of agitation in patients with bipolar I disorder.

Methods: A Phase 3, randomized, double blind, placebo-controlled, parallel group inpatient study was performed at 17 psychiatric research facilities. Agitated patients (N=314) with bipolar I disorder (manic or mixed episodes) were randomized (1:1:1) to inhaled loxapine 5 mg or 10 mg, or inhaled placebo using the Staccato® system.

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The design, synthesis, and structure-activity relationships of a novel series of pyrazines, acting as corticotropin releasing factor-1 (CRF-1) receptor antagonists, are described. Synthetic methodologies were developed to prepare a number of substituted pyrazine cores utilizing regioselective halogenation and chemoselective derivatization. Noteworthy, an efficient 5-step synthesis was developed for the lead compound 59 (NGD 98-2), which required no chromatography.

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Background: There is a need for a rapid-acting, non-injection, acute treatment for agitation.

Aims: To evaluate inhaled loxapine for acute treatment of agitation in schizophrenia.

Method: This phase III, randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel-group study (ClinicalTrials.

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Rationale: Zolpidem is a hypnotic drug that binds to γ-aminobutyric acid type A receptors but lacks consistently demonstrable anxiolytic efficacy.

Methods: Rhesus monkeys (N = 4) were trained under a multiple schedule in which food-maintained responding was programmed (18-response fixed ratio) for a 5-min period, followed by a 5-min period in which the food-maintained responding was suppressed by response-contingent electric shock (20-response fixed ratio). Doses of zolpidem (range = 0.

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Adaptive responding to threatening stressors is of fundamental importance for survival. Dysfunctional hyperactivation of corticotropin releasing factor type-1 (CRF(1)) receptors in stress response system pathways is linked to stress-related psychopathology and CRF(1) receptor antagonists (CRAs) have been proposed as novel therapeutic agents. CRA effects in diverse animal models of stress that detect anxiolytics and/or antidepressants are reviewed, with the goal of evaluating their potential therapeutic utility in depression, anxiety, and other stress-related disorders.

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Dopamine replacement therapy in Parkinson's disease (PD) using L-dopa is invariably associated with a loss of drug efficacy ("wearing off") and the onset of dyskinesia. The use of dopamine receptor partial agonists might improve therapeutic benefit without increased dyskinesia expression but may antagonise the effects of L-dopa. We now examine the effects of the novel high affinity, dopamine D(2) receptor partial agonist, aplindore alone and in combination with L-dopa in the 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine (MPTP)-treated common marmoset.

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Drugs that act as allosteric activators at the benzodiazepine site of the gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA(A)) receptor complex are used commonly to treat insomnia but relatively little is known of how such use affects learning and memory. Although anterograde effects on memory acquisition have been shown, possible retrograde effects on consolidation are more relevant when such agents are administered at bedtime. We tested the effects of two GABA(A) allosteric activators on sleep-dependent motor skill memory consolidation in 12 healthy male subjects.

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A remarkable diversity of psychiatric and neurological disorders have been associated with dysfunction of dopamine (DA)-containing neurons, including schizophrenia, bipolar disorder (BD), Parkinson's disease (PD), and restless legs syndrome (RLS). In such disorders, transmission in discrete DA pathways may range from hypoactivation to hyperactivation of DA receptors, particularly those of the D(2) subtype, providing the rationale for treatment approaches that activate or block D(2) receptors, respectively. However, full agonists or pure D(2) receptor antagonists may not be optimal therapeutic approaches for their respective disorders for a number of reasons, including an inability to restore the aberrant DA pathways to a normal level of basal tone.

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The present review focuses on the corticotropin releasing factor type 1 (CRF(1)) receptor as a novel target for treating depression, anxiety and other stress-related disorders. An organism's stress response system is a complex network of neuronal, endocrine and autonomic pathways which has evolved to provide adaptive reactions to severe environmental and physiological stressors. The peptide CRF plays a critical role in the proper functioning of the stress response system through its actions on CRF(1) receptors located at multiple anatomical sites.

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