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Erik W. Gunderson

Researcher at University of Virginia

Publications -  39
Citations -  1898

Erik W. Gunderson is an academic researcher from University of Virginia. The author has contributed to research in topics: Buprenorphine & Poison control. The author has an hindex of 22, co-authored 37 publications receiving 1685 citations. Previous affiliations of Erik W. Gunderson include Columbia University & University of York.

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“Spice” and “K2” Herbal Highs: A Case Series and Systematic Review of the Clinical Effects and Biopsychosocial Implications of Synthetic Cannabinoid Use in Humans

TL;DR: A systematic review of published reports on synthetic cannabinoid (SC) agonists in humans finds three cases in which experienced marijuana users meeting criteria for cannabis dependence with physiologic dependence smoked SC products regularly and reported that SC product use effectively alleviated cannabis withdrawal.
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Dronabinol and marijuana in HIV-positive marijuana smokers. Caloric intake, mood, and sleep.

TL;DR: For HIV-positive marijuana smokers, both dronabinol (at doses 8 times current recommendations) and marijuana were well tolerated and produced substantial and comparable increases in food intake.
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A survey of synthetic cannabinoid consumption by current cannabis users.

TL;DR: Among current marijuana and tobacco users, SC product consumption was common and persisted despite a federal ban and the primary reasons for the use of SC-containing products seem to be to evade drug detection and to experience a marijuana-like high.
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Cocaine-Specific Antibodies Blunt the Subjective Effects of Smoked Cocaine in Humans

TL;DR: The TA-CD vaccine substantially decreased smoked cocaine's intoxicating effects in those generating sufficient antibody, and these data support further testing of cocaine immunotherapy as a treatment for cocaine dependence.
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Acute Physiological and Behavioral Effects of Intranasal Methamphetamine in Humans

TL;DR: Results show that intranasal methamphetamine produced predictable effects on multiple behavioral and physiological measures before peak plasma levels were observed, which might have important implications for potential toxicity after repeated doses.