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Dana V. Romero

National Institute on Drug Abuse

1 paper in the library · 933 citations · publishing 2000

Papers

Amphetamine-type central nervous system stimulants release norepinephrine more potently than they release dopamine and serotonin

Synapse January 1, 2000 Richard B. Rothman, Michael H. Baumann, Christina M. Dersch et al. 933 citations

Stimulants like amphetamine, MDMA, and methamphetamine are known to produce reinforcing effects in animals through the brain chemical dopamine. However, their subjective effects in humans—such as euphoria or alertness—may rely more on norepinephrine. Using lab tests, the authors measured how several stimulants affect the release of norepinephrine and dopamine. They found that all tested drugs were most potent at releasing norepinephrine. Crucially, the oral doses that produce amphetamine-like subjective effects in people correlated with the drugs' ability to release norepinephrine, not dopamine, and did not lower prolactin levels (a marker of dopamine release). These findings suggest norepinephrine may play a key role in the subjective experience of stimulants in humans.