Publications by authors named "R Malison"

Article Synopsis
  • The study explores the effects of calcitriol (active vitamin D) on dopamine receptors in healthy adults, utilizing a randomized, double-blind design with PET scans before and after amphetamine administration.
  • Findings indicate that calcitriol enhances dopamine receptor availability in certain brain regions (ventral striatum and dorsal putamen) and influences dopamine release after amphetamine.
  • These results suggest a potential role for vitamin D in targeting dopaminergic function, which may be relevant for treating disorders with dopamine dysregulation.
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Background: Our group has established the feasibility of using on-body electrocardiographic (ECG) sensors to detect cocaine use in the human laboratory. The purpose of the current study was to test whether ECG sensors and features are capable of discriminating cocaine use from other non-cocaine sympathomimetics.

Methods: Eleven subjects with cocaine use disorder wore the Zephyr BioHarness™ 3 chest band under six experimental (drug and non-drug) conditions, including 1) laboratory, intravenous cocaine self-administration, 2) after a single oral dose of methylphenidate, 3) during aerobic exercise, 4) during tobacco use (N=7 who smoked tobacco), and 5) during routine activities of daily inpatient living (unit activity).

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Many aquatic insects are exposed to the dual stressors of heavy metal pollution and rising water temperatures from global warming. These stresses may interact and have stronger impacts on aquatic organisms if heavy metals interfere with the ability of these organisms to handle high temperatures. Here we focus on the effect of copper on upper thermal limits of giant salmonfly nymphs (Order: Plecoptera, Pteronarcys californica), a stonefly species which is common in parts of western North America.

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Like all taxa, populations of aquatic insects may respond to climate change by evolving new physiologies or behaviors, shifting their range, exhibiting physiological and behavioral plasticity, or going extinct. We evaluated the importance of plasticity by measuring changes in growth, survival and respiratory phenotypes of salmonfly nymphs (the stonefly Pteronarcys californica) in response to experimental combinations of dissolved oxygen and temperature. Overall, smaller individuals grew more rapidly during the 6-week experimental period, and oxygen and temperature interacted to affect growth in complex ways.

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Mining provides resources for people but can pose risks to ecosystems that support cultural keystone species. Our synthesis reviews relevant aspects of mining operations, describes the ecology of salmonid-bearing watersheds in northwestern North America, and compiles the impacts of metal and coal extraction on salmonids and their habitat. We conservatively estimate that this region encompasses nearly 4000 past producing mines, with present-day operations ranging from small placer sites to massive open-pit projects that annually mine more than 118 million metric tons of earth.

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