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Science 324 (5935), 1168501-1734 (28 May 2009)
Science Magazine, fundamental understanding of addiction physiology. Brain-Derived Neurotropic Factor increase in Ventral Tegmental Area in addiction.
www.articlepaw.com
Many people are afraid or dont like rats but are they really that bad as pets?
Journal of Cellular Physiology 216 (3), 805-15 (01 Sep 2008)
The Biochemical journal 391 (Pt 2), 359-70 (15 Oct 2005)
Biochemical and biophysical research communications 276 (3), 1162-9 (05 Oct 2000)
The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience 28 (33), 8376-82 (13 Aug 2008)
load-on.org
City Rats 2009 Eight haunted people meet and fall apart - looking for redemption in each other. Jim is throwing watermelons off his office roof. He's testing rapidshare.com megaupload mediafire
www.onlywire.com
Chicago Pest Control Expert answers questions
Posted by firstnamemike (who is an author) and 1694 others with 534 comments on Fri Mar 27 2009 at 03:42 UTC | info | related
Alcoholism, clinical and experimental research 32 (6), 937-41 (Jun 2008)
From eight New England Veterans Integrated Service Network centers, 754 patients were dispensed disulfiram, and 971 were dispensed naltrexone, encompassing 873 and 1075 treatment episodes, respectively. Treatment episode durations were virtually identical for both drugs: more than 35% of episodes were 1 month or shorter, more than 50% were 2 months or shorter, and 75% were 5 months or shorter. Concurrently prescribed neuroleptic or statin medications predicted longer disulfiram and naltrexone treatment episodes. However, for patients newly prescribed common neuroleptic, antidepressant, or statin agents, the risks for discontinuing disulfiram or naltrexone were 1.4 to 2.3 times greater than for discontinuing these other agents.
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