Pro-Psychotic Effects of Drugs of Abuse
Sunday April 22, 2018
3:30 pm
-
6:00 pm
Eastern Time (ET)
Room 16B
BEH
DDD
DPE
Chair :
Michael Wood
Circuit Therapeutics, Inc
Michael Berquist
University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences
Chronic abuse of drugs from various pharmacological classes can produce psychoses that are indistinguishable from symptoms associated with schizophrenia. A well-characterized example of this is amphetamine-induced psychotic disorder. In laboratory settings, the use of pharmacologically-induced models of psychosis has greatly improved our understanding of psychosis and aided in identifying mechanisms beyond dopamine antagonism that may increase antipsychotic efficacy. This symposium will address the role of serotonergic, glutamatergic, and cannabinergic neurotransmitter systems in mediating or attenuating aspects of psychosis, and provide a current review of pharmacologically-induced models of psychosis.
Speakers
Michael Wood
- Circuit Therapeutics, Inc
Beyond Dopamine: Neuropharmacology of Atypical Antipsychotics
Bita Moghaddam
- Oregon Health & Sciences University
Becoming Unglued: Glutamate Dysfunction and Psychosis
Susan Powell
- University of California, San Diego
A Trip Down the Rabbit Hole: Hallucinogens and Psychosis
Patrick Skosnik
- Yale University
Reefer Madness: Insights from Cannabinoid-Induced Psychosis
Michael Berquist
- University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences
There’s a Cat in the Colony Room: Modeling Psychosis in Rodents