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Disuse supersensitivity

Disuse supersensitivity, also pharmacological disuse supersensitivity or pharmacological denervation supersensitivity, is the increased sensitivity by a postsynaptic cell because of decreased input by incoming axons, e.g., due to the exposure to an antagonist drug.

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Disuse supersensitivity, also pharmacological disuse supersensitivity or pharmacological denervation supersensitivity, is the increased sensitivity by a postsynaptic cell because of decreased input by incoming axons, e.g., due to the exposure to an antagonist drug.12

Jaffe and Sharpless pointed out that withdrawal syndrome after the cessation of a chronically used drug often shows an exaggerated response which is normally suppressed by the drug which produced a dependence. They suggested the model according to which a drug has both excitatory and depressive effects. Depressive effects generate hypersensitivity, but at the same time they mask it. When drug usage stops, hypersensitivity becomes unmasked.3

See also

See also

References

References

  1. Yarbrough GG, Phillis JW., "Supersensitivity of central neurons--a brief review of an emerging concept", Can J Neurol Sci. 1975 Aug;2(3):147–52. PMID 169978
  2. Jaffe JH, Sharpless SK., "Pharmacological denervation supersensitivity in the central nervous system: a theory of physical dependence.", Res Publ Assoc Res Nerv Ment Dis. 1968;46:226–46. PMID 5749386
  3. Drug Addiction I: Morphine, Sedative/Hypnotic and Alcohol Dependence, Springer Science & Business Media, 2013, ISBN 3642666124, p. 636