Drug Addiction Current Events | Drug Addiction News | 7
|
| Page
7 of
37 |
727 Results |
|
|
|
Sort By:
Page Views | Date |
Unlocking mystery of why dopamine freezes Parkinson's patients Parkinson's disease and drug addiction are polar opposite diseases, but both depend upon dopamine in the brain. Parkinson's patients don't have enough of it; drug addicts get too much of it. Although the importance of dopamine in these disorders has been well known, the way it works has been a mystery. view more (2008-08-11)
Binge drinking in childhood and adolescence German adolescents are top at boozing! In the current edition of Deutsches Ärzteblatt International, Martin Stolle et al. of the German Center for Addiction Research in Childhood and Adolescence in Hamburg report that the main change has been the increase in the number of intoxicated girls. view more (2009-05-22)
U of M study: Health food supplement may curb addiction of pathological gamblers University of Minnesota researchers have discovered that a common amino acid, available as a health food supplement, may help curb pathological gamblers' addiction. view more (2007-09-12)
Study highlights new and cheaper way to treat heroin addiction Costly methadone treatment for heroin addicts could be replaced by a substitute painkiller that is half the price, safer and less toxic. view more (2006-12-08)
Penn State research shows withdrawal drug offers relief for Crohn's sufferers A Penn State College of Medicine pilot study suggests that a drug used to ease symptoms of alcohol and drug addiction may also bring relief to people with Crohn's disease, a chronic inflammatory disorder of the intestine that affects an estimated 500,000 Americans. view more (2006-05-30)
Club drugs inflict damage similar to traumatic brain injury What do suffering a traumatic brain injury and using club drugs have in common"? University of Florida researchers say both may trigger a similar chemical chain reaction in the brain, leading to cell death, memory loss and potentially irreversible brain damage. view more (2007-11-30)
Crushing cigarettes in a virtual reality environment reduces tobacco addiction Smokers who crushed computer-simulated cigarettes as part of a psychosocial treatment program in a virtual reality environment had significantly reduced nicotine dependence and higher rates of tobacco abstinence than smokers participating in the same program who grasped a computer-simulated ball. view more (2009-10-28)
OHSU lab finds meth receptor that could lead to therapy A recently discovered signaling system in the brain has just been shown to be turned on by methamphetamine, an Oregon Health & Science University study found. view more (2007-04-19)
Prisoner HIV program leads to continuum of medical care after release By linking HIV positive prisoners to community-based medical care prior to release through an innovative program called Project Bridge, 95 percent of ex-offenders were retained in health care for a year after being released from incarceration, according to researchers from The Miriam Hospital. view more (2008-05-08)
Highly active antiretroviral therapy of similar benefit for HIV-infected injection drug users Contrary to the belief that HIV-infected injection drug users (IDUs) receive less benefit from highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART), new research finds little difference in the survival rate between IDUs and non-IDUs after 4-5 years of receiving HAART. view more (2008-08-04)
Pedophilia may be the result of faulty brain wiring Pedophilia might be the result of faulty connections in the brain, according to new research released by the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH). view more (2007-11-28)
Doctors Fear Asking Mentally Ill to Quit Smoking People with mental illnesses such as depression and anxiety are the heaviest smokers in the country, but their doctors are afraid to ask them to quit. They assume that if their patients try to quit smoking, their mental disorders will get worse. view more (2009-09-10)
Protein amplification in melanoma is possible drug target Researchers have pinpointed specific gene and protein over-production in metastatic melanoma, pointing the way to a possible new drug target, according to a study published in Nature July 7. view more (2005-07-11)
Imaging study may help point toward more effective smoking cessation treatments Results of a new imaging study, supported in part by the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), National Institutes of Health, show that the nicotine received in just a few puffs of a cigarette can exert a force powerful enough to drive an individual to continue smoking. view more (2006-08-08)
UT Southwestern researchers discover brain's memory 'buffer' in single cells Individual nerve cells in the front part of the brain can hold traces of memories on their own for as long as a minute and possibly longer, researchers at UT Southwestern Medical Center have found. view more (2009-01-26)
Same Genes May Underlie Alcohol and Nicotine Co-Abuse Vulnerability to both alcohol and nicotine abuse may be influenced by the same genetic factor, according to a recent study supported by the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA), part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH). view more (2006-03-20)
Recreational cocaine use may impair inhibitory control The recreational use of cocaine has rapidly increased in many European countries over the past few years. view more (2007-11-07)
Sleep problems — real and perceived — get in the way of alcoholism recovery The first few months of recovery from an alcohol problem are hard enough. But they're often made worse by serious sleep problems, caused by the loss of alcohol's sedative effects, and the long-term sleep-disrupting impact that alcohol dependence can have on the brain. view more (2006-12-07)
When smoking was believed to cure cancer! [National No Smoking Day: 12 March 2003] Smoking was believed to provide a cure for cancer! - That's one of the surprising facts arising from a detailed study into tobacco use by a University of Leicester academic. Dr Jason Hughes has moved beyond his study into the biological addiction to smoking and instead examines how social and personal understandings of smoking crucially affect the... view more... (2003-03-11)
Initial reaction to nicotine can dictate addiction Following up on studies that have indicated the speed with which adolescents can get hooked on cigarettes, researchers at the University of Massachusetts Medical School have conducted the first study to determine why some adolescents who try smoking get addicted while others do not. view more (2007-10-01)
| |
| Page
7 of
37 |
727 Results |
|
|
|
Sort By:
Page Views | Date |
|