Results 151 to 160 of about 240,105 (210)

A Comparison of the Vascular Dopamine Receptor with Other Dopamine Receptors

Annual Review of Pharmacology and Toxicology, 1978
The dopamine (DA) receptor has had an interesting history. Unusual actions were attributed to the catecholamine for many years, but these effects were generally considered to be manifestations of activation of 0.and ,8-adrenergic receptors rather thap results of action of DA on a specific receptor (1). The pendulum now has swung the other way.
L I, Goldberg, P H, Volkman, J D, Kohli
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Dopamine receptor pharmacology

Trends in Pharmacological Sciences, 1994
Although antipsychotic drugs originally helped to discover dopamine receptors, the five dopamine receptors presently identified and cloned are facilitating the search for and discovery of more selective antipsychotic and antiparkinson drugs. The D1-like dopamine receptors, D1 and D5, are sensitive to the same drugs as the D1 receptor in native tissues,
P, Seeman, H H, Van Tol
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Multiple receptors for dopamine

Nature, 1979
Pharmacological and biochemical criteria can be used to separate those dopamine receptors which are linked to the enzyme adenylyl cyclase and those which are not.
J W, Kebabian, D B, Calne
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Dopamine Receptor and Hypertension

Current Medicinal Chemistry-Cardiovascular & Hematological Agents, 2005
Dopamine plays an important role in the pathogenesis of hypertension by regulating epithelial sodium transport and reactive oxygen and by interacting with vasopressin, renin-angiotensin, and the sympathetic nervous system. Decreased renal dopamine production and/or impaired dopamine receptor function have been reported in hypertension.
Chunyu, Zeng   +3 more
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Dopamine Receptors And Hypertension

Acta Clinica Belgica, 1988
Dopamine receptors and ...
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Dopamine receptors and the dopamine hypothesis of schizophrenia

Synapse, 1987
AbstractThe discovery of neuroleptic drugs in 1952 provided a new strategy for seeking a biological basis of schizophrenia. This entailed a search for a primary site of neuroleptic action. The Parkinsonian effects caused by neuroleptics suggested that dopamine transmission may be disrupted by these drugs.
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