Aerobic exercise decreases the positive-reinforcing effects of cocaine.
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Exercise-based treatments for substance use disorders: evidence, theory, and practicalityNatural rewards, neuroplasticity, and non-drug addictionsExercise as a novel treatment for drug addiction: a neurobiological and stage-dependent hypothesis.Sex Differences in Behavioral Dyscontrol: Role in Drug Addiction and Novel TreatmentsPhysical activity and the endocannabinoid system: an overviewTreadmill exercise improves fitness and reduces craving and use of cocaine in individuals with concurrent cocaine and tobacco-use disorderAerobic exercise training reduces cannabis craving and use in non-treatment seeking cannabis-dependent adultsThe effects of resistance exercise on cocaine self-administration, muscle hypertrophy, and BDNF expression in the nucleus accumbens.Wheel running exercise attenuates vulnerability to self-administer nicotine in ratsSex differences in the effect of wheel running on subsequent nicotine-seeking in a rat adolescent-onset self-administration modelEffect of wheel-running during abstinence on subsequent nicotine-seeking in rats.Exercise as a potential treatment for drug abuse: evidence from preclinical studiesAerobic exercise attenuates reinstatement of cocaine-seeking behavior and associated neuroadaptations in the prefrontal cortex.Voluntary wheel running attenuates ethanol withdrawal-induced increases in seizure susceptibility in male and female rats.Dose-dependent effects of wheel running on cocaine-seeking and prefrontal cortex Bdnf exon IV expression in rats.Dose-dependent effectiveness of wheel running to attenuate cocaine-seeking: impact of sex and estrous cycle in rats.Caudate nucleus-dependent navigational strategies are associated with increased use of addictive drugsExercise decreases speedball self-administrationThe Treatment of Obesity and Its Co-occurrence with Substance Use DisordersReduction of adult hippocampal neurogenesis confers vulnerability in an animal model of cocaine addictionChronic wheel running affects cocaine-induced c-Fos expression in brain reward areas in ratsExercise reverses the effects of early life stress on orexin cell reactivity in male but not female rats.Environmental modulation of alcohol intake in hamsters: effects of wheel running and constant light exposure.Prefrontal cortex and drug abuse vulnerability: translation to prevention and treatment interventions.The interactive effects of environmental enrichment and extinction interventions in attenuating cue-elicited cocaine-seeking behavior in ratsEnvironmental living conditions introduced during forced abstinence alter cocaine-seeking behavior and Fos protein expressionAssessing ethanol's actions in the suprachiasmatic circadian clock using in vivo and in vitro approaches.Sex differences in drug addiction and response to exercise intervention: From human to animal studiesLong-term voluntary wheel running is rewarding and produces plasticity in the mesolimbic reward pathway.Wheel running reduces high-fat diet intake, preference and mu-opioid agonist stimulated intake.Extended access methamphetamine decreases immature neurons in the hippocampus which results from loss and altered development of neural progenitors without altered dynamics of the S-phase of the cell cycleChronic forced exercise during adolescence decreases cocaine conditioned place preference in Lewis rats.The effects of post-extinction exercise on cocaine-primed and stress-induced reinstatement of cocaine seeking in ratsAccess to a running wheel inhibits the acquisition of cocaine self-administration.Environmental enrichment counters cocaine abstinence-induced stress and brain reactivity to cocaine cues but fails to prevent the incubation effectEXERCISE PREFERENCES OF PATIENTS IN SUBSTANCE ABUSE TREATMENTReciprocal inhibitory effects of intravenous d-methamphetamine self-administration and wheel activity in rats.Access to a running wheel decreases cocaine-primed and cue-induced reinstatement in male and female rats.The use of a running wheel to measure activity in rodents: relationship to energy balance, general activity, and reward.The addicted brain craves new neurons: putative role for adult-born progenitors in promoting recovery
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Aerobic exercise decreases the positive-reinforcing effects of cocaine.
description
article científic
@ca
article scientifique
@fr
articolo scientifico
@it
artigo científico
@pt
bilimsel makale
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scientific article published on 27 June 2008
@en
vedecký článok
@sk
vetenskaplig artikel
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videnskabelig artikel
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vědecký článek
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name
Aerobic exercise decreases the positive-reinforcing effects of cocaine.
@en
Aerobic exercise decreases the positive-reinforcing effects of cocaine.
@nl
type
label
Aerobic exercise decreases the positive-reinforcing effects of cocaine.
@en
Aerobic exercise decreases the positive-reinforcing effects of cocaine.
@nl
prefLabel
Aerobic exercise decreases the positive-reinforcing effects of cocaine.
@en
Aerobic exercise decreases the positive-reinforcing effects of cocaine.
@nl
P2093
P2860
P1476
Aerobic exercise decreases the positive-reinforcing effects of cocaine.
@en
P2093
Jordan C Iordanou
Karl T Schmidt
Mark A Smith
Martina L Mustroph
P2860
P304
P356
10.1016/J.DRUGALCDEP.2008.05.006
P577
2008-06-27T00:00:00Z