Sensitization to the psychosis-inducing effects of cocaine compared with measures of cocaine craving and cue reactivity

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Abstract

A previous study has suggested that sensitization to the psychosis-inducing effects of cocaine may be a marker of vulnerability to relapse in cocaine addiction. In this report, cocaine-dependent subjects participating in a study on naturally occurring and cue-induced cocaine craving were interviewed about prior experience of cocaine-induced psychosis and the degree to which this effect had become more frequent or severe or had occurred at lower cumulative doses. Sensitization to cocaine-induced psychosis was negatively correlated with baseline measures of drug dependence severity and indices of cocaine craving over the preceding 24 hours but not with measures of cocaine cue reactivity.

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Reid, M. S., Ciplet, D., O’Leary, S., Branchey, M., Buydens-Branchey, L., & Angrist, B. (2004). Sensitization to the psychosis-inducing effects of cocaine compared with measures of cocaine craving and cue reactivity. American Journal on Addictions, 13(3), 305–315. https://doi.org/10.1080/10550490490460175

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