P
Patrick K. Randall
Researcher at Medical University of South Carolina
Publications - 119
Citations - 6180
Patrick K. Randall is an academic researcher from Medical University of South Carolina. The author has contributed to research in topics: Alcohol dependence & Apomorphine. The author has an hindex of 40, co-authored 116 publications receiving 5741 citations. Previous affiliations of Patrick K. Randall include University of Southern California & University of Queensland.
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Prospective relations between social support and depression: differential direction of effects for parent and peer support?
TL;DR: Results are consistent with the theory that support decreases the risk for depression but suggest that this effect may be specific to parental support during early adolescence, and also imply thatThis effect may only occur with peer support during this period.
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A longitudinal study of estrous cyclicity in aging C57BL/6J mice: I. Cycle frequency, length and vaginal cytology.
TL;DR: The observation that the initial phase o cycle prolongation was not usually associated with extended cornification is consistent with earlier evidence that this period is characterized by a delayed, rather than prolonged, preovulatory rise of estradiol.
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Patterns of gene expression in the frontal cortex discriminate alcoholic from nonalcoholic individuals
Jianwen Liu,Joanne Marie Lewohl,R. Adron Harris,Vishwanath R. Iyer,Peter R. Dodd,Patrick K. Randall,R. Dayne Mayfield +6 more
TL;DR: A consistent re-programming of gene expression in alcohol abusers that reliably discriminates alcoholic from non-alcoholic individuals is revealed.
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Drinking to cope, emotional distress and alcohol use and abuse: A ten-year model
TL;DR: Baseline drinking to cope was associated with more alcohol consumption and drinking problems at all four observations across the 10-year interval and individuals who had a stronger propensity to drink to cope showed a stronger link between both anxiety and depressive symptoms and drinking outcomes.
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Effect of Naltrexone and Ondansetron on Alcohol Cue-Induced Activation of the Ventral Striatum in Alcohol-Dependent People
Hugh Myrick,Raymond F. Anton,Xingbao Li,Scott Henderson,Patrick K. Randall,Konstantin Voronin +5 more
TL;DR: Evidence is found that these medications, alone or in combination, could decrease alcohol cue-induced activation of the ventral striatum, consistent with their putative treatment efficacy.