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Mark S. Gold

Washington University in St. Louis

4 papers in the library · 92 citations · publishing 1994-2024

Papers

PRECLINICAL STUDY: Changes in leptin, ghrelin, growth hormone and neuropeptide‐Y after an acute model of MDMA and methamphetamine exposure in rats

Addiction Biology October 2, 2007 Firas Kobeissy, Jennifer A. Jeung, Matthew Warren et al. 47 citations

Acute administration of MDMA (ecstasy) and methamphetamine to adult male rats altered serum levels of appetite-regulating hormones in a dose- and time-dependent manner. MDMA caused transient decreases in leptin and growth hormone and increases in ghrelin, with levels returning to baseline after 24 hours. Both MDMA and methamphetamine produced a steady decrease in neuropeptide-Y. These hormone changes may help explain the reduced eating observed in humans who abuse these drugs.

A Narrative Review of Current and Emerging Trends in the Treatment of Alcohol Use Disorder

Brain Sciences March 20, 2024 Muhammet Celik, Mark S. Gold, Brian Fuehrlein 22 citations

Alcohol use disorder contributes to over 140,000 annual deaths in the United States, over 200 related diseases globally, and 5.1% of the global disease burden, yet remains undertreated with few approved medications. This narrative review describes the current treatment landscape and novel strategies for alcohol withdrawal syndrome and AUD, including psychedelics combined with psychotherapy, noninvasive neural-circuit-based interventions, phosphodiesterase-4 inhibitors, and GLP-1 receptor agonists. Recent studies show promising results for these approaches, but further research is needed to fully understand their effectiveness. The shortage of approved medications and other treatment modalities highlights the urgent need for continued investigation.

LSD use among US high school students

JAMA February 9, 1994 Mark S. Gold 12 citations

A large annual survey of over half a million U.S. junior and senior high school students in 1993 found that hallucinogen use rose slightly from 4.9% to 5.3% compared to the previous year. Among hallucinogen users, 83% reported typically getting high or stoned, a higher proportion than among beer drinkers (24%), marijuana smokers (66%), or cocaine users (74%). The authors suggest many young people view cocaine as very dangerous but see LSD as spiritually uplifting; 55% of seniors believed trying LSD a few times is not harmful.