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Mental and Social Health

University of Kentucky

2017

Cocaine

Articles 1 - 1 of 1

Full-Text Articles in Behavior and Behavior Mechanisms

N-Acetylcysteine Reduces Cocaine-Cue Attentional Bias And Differentially Alters Cocaine Self-Administration Based On Dosing Order, B. Levi Bolin, Joseph L. Alcorn Iii, Joshua A. Lile, Craig R. Rush, Abner O. Rayapati, Lon R. Hays, William W. Stoops Sep 2017

N-Acetylcysteine Reduces Cocaine-Cue Attentional Bias And Differentially Alters Cocaine Self-Administration Based On Dosing Order, B. Levi Bolin, Joseph L. Alcorn Iii, Joshua A. Lile, Craig R. Rush, Abner O. Rayapati, Lon R. Hays, William W. Stoops

Behavioral Science Faculty Publications

Background—Disrupted glutamate homeostasis is thought to contribute to cocaine-use disorder, in particular, by enhancing the incentive salience of cocaine stimuli. n-Acetylcysteine might be useful in cocaine-use disorder by normalizing glutamate function. In prior studies, n-acetylcysteine blocked the reinstatement of cocaine seeking in laboratory animals and reduced the salience of cocaine stimuli and delayed relapse in humans.

Methods—The present study determined the ability of maintenance on n-acetylcysteine (0 or 2400 mg/day, counterbalanced) to reduce the incentive salience of cocaine stimuli, as measured by an attentional bias task, and attenuate intranasal cocaine self-administration (0, 30, and 60 mg). Fourteen individuals …