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1. Cytochrome P450 2C24: expression, tissue distribution, high-throughput assay, and pharmacological inhibition

2. TRAM-34, a putatively selective blocker of intermediate-conductance, calcium-activated potassium channels, inhibits cytochrome P450 activity.

3. Opioid Analgesia in P450 Gene Cluster Knockout Mice: A Search for Analgesia-Relevant Isoforms

4. Deficits in neuronal cytochrome P450 activity attenuate opioid analgesia but not opioid side effects

5. Significance of neuronal cytochrome P450 activity in opioid-mediated stress-induced analgesia

6. Impact of Nicotine Metabolism on Nicotine’s Pharmacological Effects and Behavioral Responses: Insights from a Cyp2a(4/5)bgs-Null Mouse

7. Antinociceptive activity of CC44, a biotinylated improgan congener

8. Pain-facilitating medullary neurons contribute to opioid-induced respiratory depression

9. Histamine-gated ion channels in mammals?

10. Cytochrome P450 2C24: expression, tissue distribution, high-throughput assay, and pharmacological inhibition

11. Mutagenesis and computational docking studies support the existence of a histamine binding site at the extracellular β3+β3- interface of homooligomeric β3 GABAA receptors

12. Efficacy of improgan, a non-opioid analgesic, in neuropathic pain

13. Addressing the malaria drug resistance challenge using flow cytometry to discover new antimalarials

14. Improgan-induced hypothermia: A role for cannabinoid receptors in improgan-induced changes in nociceptive threshold and body temperature

15. Activation of peripheral and spinal histamine H3 receptors inhibits formalin-induced inflammation and nociception, respectively

16. Antinociceptive activity of furan-containing congeners of improgan and ranitidine

17. Neuronal cytochrome P450 activity and opioid analgesia: relevant sites and mechanisms

18. Cannabinoid–improgan cross-tolerance: Improgan is a cannabinomimetic analgesic lacking affinity at the cannabinoid CB1 receptor

19. (±)-18-Methoxycoronaridine: A Novel Iboga Alkaloid Congener Having Potential Anti-Addictive Efficacy

20. Inhibition of chemical and low-intensity mechanical nociception by activation of histamine H3 receptors

21. Membrane-bound histamine N-methyltransferase in mouse brain: possible role in the synaptic inactivation of neuronal histamine

22. Activation of spinal histamine H3 receptors inhibits mechanical nociception

23. Improgan antinociception does not require neuronal histamine or histamine receptors

24. Extracellular histamine levels in the feline preoptic/anterior hypothalamic area during natural sleep–wakefulness and prolonged wakefulness: An in vivo microdialysis study

25. Antinociceptive Activity of Derivatives of Improgran and Burimamide

26. Antinociceptive activity of impentamine, a histamine congener, after CNS administration

27. Absence of antinociceptive tolerance to improgan, a cimetidine analog, in rats

28. Effects of naltrexone and histamine antagonists on the antinociceptive activity of the cimetidine analog SKF92374 in rats

30. TRAM-34, a putatively selective blocker of intermediate-conductance, calcium-activated potassium channels, inhibits cytochrome P450 activity

31. Modulation of morphine-induced antinociception by ibogaine and noribogaine

32. Characteristics of carbon dioxide-induced antinociception

33. Tissue distribution of ibogaine after intraperitoneal and subcutaneous administration

34. CC12, a P450/epoxygenase inhibitor, acts in the rat rostral, ventromedial medulla to attenuate morphine antinociception

36. Histamine

37. List of Contributors

38. Histamine-mediated neuronal death in a rat model of Wernicke's encephalopathy

39. Histamine-induced modulation of nociceptive responses

40. Histamine does not play an essential role in electrocortical activation during waking behavior

41. Effects of Acetylenic Epoxygenase Inhibitors on Recombinant Cytochrome P450s

42. Brain P450 epoxygenase activity is required for the antinociceptive effects of improgan, a nonopioid analgesic

43. Opiates, mast cells and histamine release

44. Physiological basis for inhibition of morphine and improgan antinociception by CC12, a P450 epoxygenase inhibitor

45. H3 receptors and pain modulation: peripheral, spinal, and brain interactions

46. Neural basis for improgan antinociception

47. Opioids activate brain analgesic circuits through cytochrome P450/epoxygenase signaling

48. Differential effects of ibogaine pretreatment on brain levels of morphine and (+)-amphetamine

49. Dimaprit — induced neurotoxicity

50. Potentiation of 2-deoxy-D-glucose antinociception, but not hyperphagia by zolantidine, a Histamine (H2) receptor antagonist

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