Page last updated: 2024-12-06

bromocriptine

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Description

Bromocriptine is a dopamine agonist that was first synthesized in the 1960s. It is a derivative of ergot, a fungus that grows on rye. Bromocriptine works by mimicking the effects of dopamine, a neurotransmitter that plays a role in regulating movement, mood, and other important functions. It is used to treat a variety of conditions, including Parkinson's disease, acromegaly, and hyperprolactinemia. Bromocriptine is also used to suppress lactation after childbirth and to treat restless legs syndrome. Bromocriptine is a potent dopamine agonist and has been studied extensively for its therapeutic potential in a variety of neurological and endocrine disorders. It is also a subject of ongoing research for its potential use in treating other conditions, such as obesity, depression, and addiction.'

Bromocriptine: A semisynthetic ergotamine alkaloid that is a dopamine D2 agonist. It suppresses prolactin secretion. [Medical Subject Headings (MeSH), National Library of Medicine, extracted Dec-2023]

Cross-References

ID SourceID
PubMed CID31101
CHEMBL ID493
CHEBI ID3181
SCHEMBL ID25297
MeSH IDM0002948

Synonyms (102)

Synonym
BIDD:GT0464
AC-13601
BRD-K14496212-001-01-1
gtpl35
(5'alpha)-2-bromo-12'-hydroxy-2'-(1-methylethyl)-5'-(2-methylpropyl)-3',6',18-trioxoergotaman
bromocriptine (usan/inn)
D03165
(6ar,9r)-5-bromo-n-((2r,5s,10as,10bs)-10b-hydroxy-5-isobutyl-2-isopropyl-3,6-dioxooctahydro-2h-oxazolo[3,2-a]pyrrolo[2,1-c]pyrazin-2-yl)-7-methyl-4,6,6a,7,8,9-hexahydroindolo[4,3-fg]quinoline-9-carboxamide
ergotaman-3',6',18-trione, 2-bromo-12'-hydroxy-2'-(1-methylethyl)-5'alpha-(2-methylpropyl)-
2-bromoergokryptine
2-bromo-12'-hydroxy-2'-(1-methylethyl)-5'-alpha-(2-methylpropyl)ergotamin-3',6',18-trione
bromergocryptine
bromocriptina [inn-spanish]
einecs 247-128-5
bromocriptinum [inn-latin]
ergocryptine, 2-bromo-
ccris 3244
bromocriptin
bromocryptin
LOPAC0_000171
ergotaman-3',6',18-trione, 2-bromo-12'-hydroxy-2'-(1-methylethyl)-5'-(2-methylpropyl)-, (5'alpha)-
n-[(2r,5s,10as,10bs)-10b-hydroxy-5-isobutyl-2-isopropyl-3,6-dioxo-8,9,10,10a-tetrahydro-5h-oxazolo[[?]]pyrrolo[[?]]pyrazin-2-yl]-bromo-methyl-[?]carboxamide
BIOMOL-NT_000005
PDSP2_001500
BPBIO1_001131
PRESTWICK2_000121
bromocriptine
25614-03-3
C06856
2-bromo-alpha-ergocryptine
2-bromo-alpha-ergokryptin
DB01200
bromoergocryptine
2-bromo-alpha-ergokryptine
bromocryptine
bromoergocriptine
NCI60_001365
PRESTWICK1_000121
PRESTWICK0_000121
SPBIO_002101
2 bromo alpha ergocryptine
2 bromoergokryptine
2 bromoergocryptine
2 bromo alpha ergokryptine
2-bromoergocryptine
CHEBI:3181 ,
(5'alpha)-2-bromo-12'-hydroxy-5'-(2-methylpropyl)-2'-(propan-2-yl)-3',6',18-trioxoergotaman
(5'alpha)-2-bromo-12'-hydroxy-2'-(1-methylethyl)-5'-(2-methylpropyl)ergotaman-3',6',18-trione
bromocriptinum
(5'alpha)-2-bromo-12'-hydroxy-5'-isobutyl-2'-isopropyl-3',6',18-trioxoergotaman
NCGC00024584-04
sandoz 15-754
2-bromo-.alpha.-ergocryptine
CHEMBL493
bdbm81993
bromocriptine+ (gtp-)
NCGC00024584-05
(+)-bromocriptine
08y ,
dtxsid1022687 ,
tox21_110907
cas-25614-03-3
dtxcid602687
CCG-204266
AKOS015961273
bromocriptina
unii-3a64e3g5zo
ergoset
bromocriptine [usan:inn:ban]
3a64e3g5zo ,
bromocriptine [usan]
ergotaman-3',6',18-trione, 2-bromo-12'-hydroxy-2'-(1-methylethyl)-5'-(2-methylpropyl)-, (5'.alpha.)-
bromocriptine [who-dd]
bromocriptine [vandf]
bromocriptine [mi]
bromocriptine [inn]
SCHEMBL25297
OZVBMTJYIDMWIL-AYFBDAFISA-N
(4r,7r)-10-bromo-n-[(1s,2s,4r,7s)-2-hydroxy-7-(2-methylpropyl)-5,8-dioxo-4-(propan-2-yl)-3-oxa-6,9-diazatricyclo[7.3.0.0^{2,6}]dodecan-4-yl]-6-methyl-6,11-diazatetracyclo[7.6.1.0^{2,7}.0^{12,16}]hexadeca-1(16),2,9,12,14-pentaene-4-carboxamide
J-016067
SR-01000075356-5
(5alpha,5'beta)-2-bromo-12'-hydroxy-5'-(2-methylpropyl)-3',6',18-trioxo-2'-(propan-2-yl)ergotaman
Q413581
10b-hydroxy-5-isobutyl-2-isopropyl-3,6-
dioxooctahydro-2h-oxazolo[3,2-a]pyrrolo
carboprost methylate,(s)
(6ar,9r)-5-bromo-n-((2r,5s,10as,10bs)-
hexahydroindolo[4,3-fg]quinoline-9-carboxamide
[2,1-c]pyrazin-2-yl)-7-methyl-4,6,6a,7,8,9-
BRD-K14496212-066-04-8
SDCCGSBI-0050159.P003
NCGC00024584-09
san 15-754; sandoz 15-754; -bromocryptine; -bromoergocryptine; -ergolactin
NCGC00024584-07
(6ar,9r)-5-bromo-n-[(1s,2s,4r,7s)-2-hydroxy-7-(2-methylpropyl)-5,8-dioxo-4-propan-2-yl-3-oxa-6,9-diazatricyclo[7.3.0.02,6]dodecan-4-yl]-7-methyl-6,6a,8,9-tetrahydro-4h-indolo[4,3-fg]quinoline-9-carboxamide
EN300-19768234
(4r,7r)-10-bromo-n-[(1s,2s,4r,7s)-2-hydroxy-7-(2-methylpropyl)-5,8-dioxo-4-(propan-2-yl)-3-oxa-6,9-diazatricyclo[7.3.0.0^{2,6}]dodecan-4-yl]-6-methyl-6,11-diazatetracyclo[7.6.1.0^{2,7}.0^{12,16}]hexadeca-1(15),2,9,12(16),13-pentaene-4-carboxamide
bromokryptine
bromocriptinum (inn-latin)
bromocriptina (inn-spanish)
g02cb01
n04bc01

Research Excerpts

Overview

Bromocriptine is a dopamine D2 agonist, which is a Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved drug to treat type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) patients. It has shown to be an effective and safe treatment for CMS in pediatric patients after posterior fossa tumor resection.

ExcerptReferenceRelevance
"Bromocriptine is a dopamine D2 agonist, which is a Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved drug to treat type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) patients."( Therapeutic potential of dopamine agonists in the treatment of type 2 diabetes mellitus.
Akhtar, MF; Akter, R; Al-Harrasi, A; Berrada, M; Bhatia, S; Damiri, F; Ferdous Mitu, J; Kabir, MT; Rahman, MH; Rahman, MS; Saleem, A, 2022
)
1.44
"Bromocriptine is a sympatholytic dopamine D2 receptor agonist with remarkable bioactivities. "( Bromocriptine therapy: Review of mechanism of action, safety and tolerability.
Abbas, M; Mahmood, Q; Mahmood, Z; Malik, A; Mehmood, MH; Naz, F; Rasool, G; Riaz, M, 2022
)
3.61
"Bromocriptine-QR is a sympatholytic dopamine D2 agonist for the treatment of type 2 diabetes that has demonstrated rapid (within 1 year) substantial reductions in adverse cardiovascular events in this population by as yet incompletely delineated mechanisms. "( Bromocriptine-QR Therapy Reduces Sympathetic Tone and Ameliorates a Pro-Oxidative/Pro-Inflammatory Phenotype in Peripheral Blood Mononuclear Cells and Plasma of Type 2 Diabetes Subjects.
Adams, J; Agyin, C; Alatrach, M; Cersosimo, E; Chamarthi, B; Chilton, R; Cincotta, AH; Cominos, N; DeFronzo, RA; Ezrokhi, M; Triplitt, C, 2022
)
3.61
"Bromocriptine has shown to be an effective and safe treatment for CMS in pediatric patients after posterior fossa tumor resection."( Bromocriptine for the treatment of postoperative cerebellar mutism syndrome in pediatric patients: Three case reports.
Amor-García, MÁ; Fernández-Llamazares, CM; García-Morín, M; Huerta-Aragonés, J; Manrique-Rodríguez, S; Narrillos-Moraza, Á; Sanjurjo-Sáez, M, 2021
)
3.51
"Bromocriptine is a sympatholytic dopamine agonist and reduces the elevated sympathetic tone, characteristic of metabolic syndrome and type 2 diabetes, which potentiates elevations of vascular oxidative/nitrosative stress, known to precipitate cardiovascular disease."( Time-of-Day-Dependent Effects of Bromocriptine to Ameliorate Vascular Pathology and Metabolic Syndrome in SHR Rats Held on High Fat Diet.
Cincotta, AH; Ezrokhi, M; Luo, S; Zhang, Y, 2021
)
1.62
"Bromocriptine is a safe and effective therapy for these patients and is more effective in mild to moderate hepatic parkinsonism."( A double-blind randomized controlled trial to assess efficacy of bromocriptine in cirrhotic patients with hepatic parkinsonism.
Anand, L; Arora, V; Bhardwaj, A; Dhamija, RM; Jindal, A; Kumar, G; Sahney, A; Sarin, SK; Sharma, BC; Vijayaraghavan, R, 2019
)
1.47
"Bromocriptine is an effective treatment for most prolactinomas. "( Suppression of MMQ cells by fulvestrant: possible mechanism of action and potential application for bromocriptine-resistant prolactinomas.
Bai, J; Gui, S; Zhang, Y, 2013
)
2.05
"Bromocriptine is an effective drug in the treatment of hyperprolactinemia with prolactinomas."( Prolactinomas in infertile women: clinical and endocrine characteristics before and after 24 months of treatment with bromocriptine.
Alic, E; Dervisefendic, M; Hajder, E; Hajder, M; Samardzic, R, 2013
)
1.32
"Bromocriptine is an approved drug originally indicated for Parkinson's disease, acromegaly, hyperprolactinemia and galactorrhoea, and recently repositioned for diabetes mellitus."( Repositioning of bromocriptine for treatment of acute myeloid leukemia.
Banús-Mulet, A; Cornet-Masana, JM; Díaz-Beyá, M; Esteve, J; Etxabe, A; Lara-Castillo, MC; Nomdedeu, M; Risueño, RM; Torrente, MÁ, 2016
)
1.5
"Bromocriptine is an ergot alkaloid dopamine D(2) receptor agonist that has been used extensively in the past to treat hyperprolactinaemia, galactorrhoea and Parkinsonism. "( Bromocriptine: old drug, new formulation and new indication.
Bailey, CJ; Barnett, AH; Holt, RI, 2010
)
3.25
"Bromocriptine is an ergot derivative available for treatment of type 2 diabetes. "( Bromocriptine mesylate for glycemic management in type 2 diabetes mellitus.
Kerr, JL; Petkewicz, KA; Timpe, EM, 2010
)
3.25
"Bromocriptine seems not to be a safe alternative for patients receiving cabergoline treatment who have preexisting or diagnosed abnormalities suggesting valvular, interstitial myocardial, or pulmonary fibrosis."( Increased prevalence of subclinical cardiac valve fibrosis in patients with prolactinomas on long-term bromocriptine and cabergoline treatment.
Elenkova, A; Kalinov, K; Shabani, R; Zacharieva, S, 2012
)
1.32
"Bromocriptine is a selective agonist for dopamine D2-receptors and is used in the treatment of Parkinson's disease. "( Pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic analyses, based on dopamine D2-receptor occupancy of bromocriptine, of bromocriptine-induced contralateral rotations in unilaterally 6-OHDA-lesioned rats.
Atsumi, M; Iga, T; Kawakami, J; Kotaki, H; Sato, H; Sawada, Y; Sugiyama, E; Yamada, Y, 2003
)
1.98
"Bromocriptine is a dopamine receptor agonist used with mixed success in the treatment of cocaine addiction. "( Bromocriptine treatment for cocaine addiction: association with plasma prolactin levels.
Gorelick, DA; Wilkins, JN, 2006
)
3.22
"Bromocriptine appears to be a potent agonist at D2-receptors."( Neurochemical effects of some ergot derivatives: a basis for their antiparkinson actions.
Markstein, R, 1981
)
0.98
"Bromocriptine, which is an ergot alcaloid with dopaminergic properties, has been used since 1965 in therapy."( [Pleuropulmonary fibrosis and bromocriptine].
Barat, M; Bellvert, P; Domblides, P; Douvier, JJ; Fréour, P; Taytard, A; Vergeret, J, 1984
)
1.28
"Bromocriptine treatment is an invaluable adjunct in long-term management of invasive prolactinomas, but surgical intervention is indicated if a CSF fistula results."( Cerebrospinal fluid rhinorrhea caused by bromocriptine therapy of prolactinoma.
Heffernan, LP; Holness, RO; Shlossberg, AH, 1984
)
1.25
"Bromocriptine seems to be a good alternative in the treatment of patients with acromegaly who have not responded to conventional therapy."( Bomocriptine treatment of patients with acromegaly resistant to conventional therapy.
Karonen, SL; Pelkonen, R; Ylikahri, R, 1980
)
0.98
"Bromocriptine thus appears to be a good alternative in the treatment of glucose intolerance in acromegalic patients and the improvement of glucose tolerance by bromocriptine may be related to the reduction in plasma glucagon levels."( Effect of long term bromocriptine treatment on glucose intolerance in acromegaly.
Chiba, T; Chihara, K; Fujita, T; Goto, B; Kadowaki, S; Matsukura, S; Minamitani, N; Taminato, T, 1982
)
1.31
"Bromocriptine (BRC) is a semisynthetic ergot alkaloid possessing dopamine agonistic activity. "( Effects of bromocriptine on single nephron and whole-kidney function in rats.
Allison, ME; Cowden, EA; Stier, CT, 1982
)
2.1
"Bromocriptine is a dopamine agonist with potential mental side effects. "( Bromocriptine associated with symptom exacerbation during neuroleptic treatment of schizoaffective schizophrenia.
Frye, PE; Kim, MH; O'Shaughnessy, RW; Pariser, SF, 1982
)
3.15
"Bromocriptine is a potent dopamine agonist which directly stimulates dopamine receptors. "( Bromocriptine and its use in Parkinsonism.
Hoehn, MM, 1981
)
3.15
"Bromocriptine is an ergot-derived dopamine agonist. "( Bromocriptine and psychosis: a literature review.
Boyd, A, 1995
)
3.18
"Bromocriptine (BRC) is a dopamine agonist that suppresses the secretion of prolactin by the pituitary gland and is known to have immunomodulating properties. "( Bromocriptine immunomodulation of experimental SLE and primary antiphospholipid syndrome via induction of nonspecific T suppressor cells.
Afek, A; Blank, M; Buskila, D; Goldberg, I; Kopolovic, J; Krause, I; Shoenfeld, Y; Teitelbaum, D, 1995
)
3.18
"Bromocriptine is a satisfactory first line treatment for macroprolactinomas, but although treatment reduces tumour size and reverses field defects in 75% of cases only one third of patients achieve a normal prolactin over medium term follow up."( Treatment of macroprolactinomas at Auckland Hospital 1975-91.
Holdaway, IM; Wallace, EA, 1995
)
1.73
"Bromocriptine is an ergot derivative and has been thought to act as a selective D2 receptor agonist, but its effects on dopamine release in vivo have not been confirmed. "( Bromocriptine enhances feeding behavior without changing dopamine metabolism.
Fujisaki, Y; Inoue, K; Iwasaki, S; Kiriike, N; Kurioka, M; Yamagami, S, 1997
)
3.18
"Bromocriptine is an ergot-derived dopamine agonist sometimes used for postpartum suppression of lactation. "( Postpartum psychosis induced by bromocriptine and pseudoephedrine.
Pinkofsky, HB; Reeves, RR, 1997
)
2.02
"Bromocriptine (BCT) is a dopamine D2 receptor agonist used for the treatment of Parkinson's disease and hyperprolactinemic disorders. "( Metabolite involvement in bromocriptine-induced prolactin inhibition in rats.
Delaforge, M; Ezan, E; Grognet, JM; Guivarc'h, D; Urien, S; Valente, D; Vienet, R, 1997
)
2.04
"Bromocriptine (BRC) is a dopamine agonist that suppresses secretion of PRL."( [Bromocriptine for refractory rheumatoid arthritis].
Mader, R, 1997
)
1.93
"Bromocriptine test seems to be a useful alternative tool for the diagnosis of neuromediated syncope also suggesting that dopaminergic supersensitivity may, at various and to varying degrees, play a role in the pathogenesis of syncopal episodes."( Bromocriptine test in the evaluation of patients with syncope of unknown aetiology. A case-control study.
Bosone, D; Castellano, AE; Cavallini, A; Micieli, G; Nappi, G, 1999
)
2.47
"Bromocriptine is an oldest dopamine agonist."( [The new Parkinson's disease drugs].
Hasegawa, K, 2000
)
1.03
"Bromocriptine (BC) is a well known anti-neoplasic agent in human PRL secreting adenomas although its effect on PRL cells is far from clear."( Bromocriptine and the expression of c-myc and c-fos in human prolactinomas.
Basso, A; Burdman, JA; Calabrese, MT; Guerra, LN, 2001
)
2.47
"Bromocriptine is an effective anti-Parkinsonian agent, particularly useful in patients with prominent dyskinesia or "on-off" reactions to levodopa; in most patients optimal results have been obtained by combining from 40 to 90 mg of bromocriptine daily with approximately 60% of the previous maximal dose of levodopa."( Ergot derivatives for Parkinsonism.
Calne, DB; Eisler, T; Neophytides, A; Nutt, JG; Teychenne, PF; Williams, AC, 1978
)
0.98
"Bromocriptine appears to be an effective drug for treating women with hypothalamic amenorrhea, particularly those unresponsive to clomiphene."( Bromocriptine induced pregnancy in two cases of euprolactinemic hypothalamic amenorrhea.
Dorato, F; Miragoli, A; Nencioni, T; Polvani, F, 1978
)
2.42
"Bromocriptine appears to be an interesting development in the treatment of Parkinson's disease."( [Treatment of parkinsonian syndromes by bromocriptin].
Durand, JP; Gautier, JC, 1977
)
0.98
"Bromocriptine is a dopaminergic agonist that is used in acromegalic patients, as well as an inhibitor of prolactin in doses of 5 to 20 mg a day."( A double-blind trial of bromocriptine in steroid dependent asthma.
Christensen, KM; Letman, H; Mikkelsen, AG, 1979
)
1.29
"Bromocriptine (CB-154) is a direct-acting dopamine agonist of proven clinical efficacy in parkinsonism. "( Bromocriptine-induced behavioral hypersensitivity: implications for the therapy of parkinsonism.
Kanapa, DJ; Klawans, HL; Nausieda, PA; Weiner, WJ, 1978
)
3.14
"Bromocriptine is a dopamine agonist that induces postural hypotension and can be used as an antihypertensive. "( Bromocriptine inhibits norepinephrine release.
Lake, CR; Shoulson, I; Steinsland, O; Teychenne, PF; Williams, AC; Ziegler, MG, 1979
)
3.15
"Bromocriptine promises to be an effective new therapeutic agent in the treatment of idiopathic parkinsonism."( Studies with bromocriptine. Part 2. Double-blind comparison with levodopa in idiopathic parkinsonism.
Calne, DB; Kartzinel, R; Shoulson, I, 1976
)
1.35
"Bromocriptine appears to be a major new agent in Parkinson's disease that is especially promising in patients no longer responding to levodopa."( Treatment of parkinson's disease with bromocriptine.
Estey, E; Goldstein, M; Kupersmith, M; Lieberman, A, 1976
)
1.25
"Bromocriptine appears to be a less potent stimulant than dopamine, and has both pre- and post-synaptic effects."( Bromocriptine in Parkinsonism: long-term treatment, dose response, and comparison with levodopa.
Debono, AG; Marsden, CD; Parkes, JD, 1976
)
2.42
"Bromocriptine is a dopamine agonist, dopamine being a natural inhibitor of PRL-secretion."( [The effect of prolactin and bromocriptine on testicular incretory function].
Gladkova, AI,
)
1.14
"Bromocriptine is an effective inhibitor of prolactin secretion and this suggests therefore that the decrease in follicular oestradiol production after pentobarbitone is due to the preovulatory surge of prolactin."( Effect of pentobarbitone sodium and bromocriptine on follicular oestradiol production in the rat.
Uilenbroek, JT, 1989
)
1.27
"Bromocriptine is an ergopeptine derivative and dopamine agonist that predominantly stimulates the striatal D2 non-adenyl cyclase-linked dopamine receptors. "( Bromocriptine in Parkinson disease.
Goldstein, M; Lieberman, AN, 1985
)
3.15

Effects

Bromocriptine has an established role in the management of hyperprolactinemia, particularly in women. A range of 5-18% of patients are reported to show bromOCriptine resistance, with only partial lowering of plasma prolactin levels and an absence of tumour shrinkage. Bromocriptne has a specific inhibitory effect on serum phospholipids.

Bromocriptine has an antitumoral effect and treatment can often be stopped after the disappearance of a microadenoma or even of a larger adenoma. Bromocripine treatment has been shown to reduce menstrual bleeding and pain in women with adenomyosis in a pilot clinical trial. QR-bromoriptine (Cycloset™) has recently been approved in the USA for the treatment of type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM)

ExcerptReferenceRelevance
"Bromocriptine has an established role in the management of hyperprolactinemia, particularly in women. "( Hyperprolactinemia presenting with encephalomalacia-associated seizure disorder and infertility: a novel application for bromocriptine therapy in reproductive endocrinology.
Saie, DJ; Sills, ES, 2005
)
1.98
"Bromocriptine has a long history of use; however, a range of 5-18% of patients are reported to show bromocriptine resistance, with only partial lowering of plasma prolactin levels and an absence of tumour shrinkage."( Quinagolide--a valuable treatment option for hyperprolactinaemia.
Barlier, A; Jaquet, P, 2006
)
1.06
"Bromocriptine has an accepted place in the management of small pituitary tumours that secrete either prolactin or growth hormone. "( Bromocriptine in management of large pituitary tumours.
Besser, GM; Charlesworth, M; Doniach, I; Halliday, AM; Kingsley, DP; McDonald, WI; Rees, LH; Wass, JA; Williams, J, 1982
)
3.15
"Bromocriptine has a specific inhibitory effect on serum phospholipids."( Prolactin and bromocriptine induced changes in liver, adipose tissue and blood lipids of mature male bonnet monkeys, Macaca radiata (Geoffroy).
Aruldhas, MM; Govindarajulu, P; Kumari, TM; Thampi, LT, 1994
)
1.37
"Bromocriptine has an antitumoral effect and treatment can often be stopped after the disappearance of a microadenoma or even of a larger adenoma."( [Functional hyperprolactinemia].
Drapier-Faure, E, 1985
)
0.99
"Bromocriptine treatment has been shown to reduce menstrual bleeding and pain in women with adenomyosis in a pilot clinical trial. "( Bromocriptine inhibits proliferation in the endometrium from women with adenomyosis.
Andersson, JK; Bogavarappu, NR; Frisendahl, C; Gemzell-Danielsson, K; Korsching, E; Lalitkumar, PGL; Pavone, D; Ponandai-Srinivasan, S; Stewart, EA; Tang, Y, 2023
)
3.8
"Bromocriptine has shown to be an effective and safe treatment for CMS in pediatric patients after posterior fossa tumor resection."( Bromocriptine for the treatment of postoperative cerebellar mutism syndrome in pediatric patients: Three case reports.
Amor-García, MÁ; Fernández-Llamazares, CM; García-Morín, M; Huerta-Aragonés, J; Manrique-Rodríguez, S; Narrillos-Moraza, Á; Sanjurjo-Sáez, M, 2021
)
3.51
"Bromocriptine has weak to moderate cytotoxicity in prostate cancer cells, but effectively induces cell-cycle arrest."( Repositioning Dopamine D2 Receptor Agonist Bromocriptine to Enhance Docetaxel Chemotherapy and Treat Bone Metastatic Prostate Cancer.
Chen, Y; Du, Y; Fu, H; Kavuri, S; Kucuk, O; Li, X; Mamouni, K; Wu, D; Yang, Y, 2018
)
1.46
"Bromocriptine has been the most widely used and effective agent to treat macroprolactinoma, and chiasmal herniation in a macroprolactinoma patient following the treatment with bromocriptine is a well-recognized complication. "( Endoscopic transsphenoidal treatment of a prolactinoma patient with brain and optic chiasmal herniations.
Ge, J; Guo, L; Qiu, Y; Zhang, N, 2014
)
1.85
"Bromocriptine has inhibitory effects on MCF- 7 cells by induction of apoptosis via D2-like receptors."( New perspective therapy of breast cancer based on selective dopamine receptor D2 agonist and antagonist effects on MCF-7 cell line.
Ahangari, G; Deezagi, A; Hejazi, SH; Pornour, M, 2015
)
1.14
"QR-bromocriptine (Cycloset™) has recently been approved in the USA for the treatment of type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM)."( Bromocriptine: old drug, new formulation and new indication.
Bailey, CJ; Barnett, AH; Holt, RI, 2010
)
2.32
"Bromocriptine has demonstrated efficacy as an adjunctive agent in the management of type 2 diabetes. "( Bromocriptine mesylate for glycemic management in type 2 diabetes mellitus.
Kerr, JL; Petkewicz, KA; Timpe, EM, 2010
)
3.25
"Bromocriptine has beneficial effect in reduction of cardiovascular complications associated with metabolic syndrome."( Effect of bromocriptine on cardiovascular complications associated with metabolic syndrome in fructose fed rats.
Kawale, LA; Nade, VS; Tajanpure, AB; Todmal, UB,
)
1.98
"Bromocriptine (BRC) has been mainly used for the inhibition of lactation, treatment of menstrual disorders, Parkinson disease, breast tumours, infertility and brain tumours as a dopamine agonist in clinics. "( Transdermal administration of bromocriptine.
Acartürk, F; Degim, IT; Demirez Lortlar, N; Erdogan, D, 2003
)
2.05
"Bromocriptine has an established role in the management of hyperprolactinemia, particularly in women. "( Hyperprolactinemia presenting with encephalomalacia-associated seizure disorder and infertility: a novel application for bromocriptine therapy in reproductive endocrinology.
Saie, DJ; Sills, ES, 2005
)
1.98
"Bromocriptine has the longest history of use and is a well-established, inexpensive, safe and effective therapy option."( Current treatment issues in female hyperprolactinaemia.
Crosignani, PG, 2006
)
1.06
"Bromocriptine has a long history of use; however, a range of 5-18% of patients are reported to show bromocriptine resistance, with only partial lowering of plasma prolactin levels and an absence of tumour shrinkage."( Quinagolide--a valuable treatment option for hyperprolactinaemia.
Barlier, A; Jaquet, P, 2006
)
1.06
"Bromocriptine has an accepted place in the management of small pituitary tumours that secrete either prolactin or growth hormone. "( Bromocriptine in management of large pituitary tumours.
Besser, GM; Charlesworth, M; Doniach, I; Halliday, AM; Kingsley, DP; McDonald, WI; Rees, LH; Wass, JA; Williams, J, 1982
)
3.15
"Bromocriptinee has proved to be effective in treatment of patients for hyperprolactinaemic diseases. "( [Gynaecological use of prolactin inhibitor bromocriptin (author's transl)].
Alexander, H; Herter, U, 1981
)
1.71
"Bromocriptine has a specific inhibitory effect on serum phospholipids."( Prolactin and bromocriptine induced changes in liver, adipose tissue and blood lipids of mature male bonnet monkeys, Macaca radiata (Geoffroy).
Aruldhas, MM; Govindarajulu, P; Kumari, TM; Thampi, LT, 1994
)
1.37
"Bromocriptine has already been tested successfully in numerous investigations on the therapy of canine pseudogravidity, but--probably because of its high price and vomitus as a frequent side effect--it has not been really introduced as a therapeutical device in canine practice."( [The treatment of pseudopregnancy in the bitch with prolactin inhibitors metergoline and bromocriptine].
Grünau, B; Hoppen, HO; Nolte, I, 1996
)
1.24
"Bromocriptine has proved to be effective and carries a low risk of undesired effects."( [Bromocriptine monotherapy of a prolactinoma causing erectile dysfunction].
Asensio Egea, L; Hita Rosino, E; Hita Villaplana, G; López Cubillana, P; Rigabert Montiel, M; Server Falgás, G; Server Pastor, G, 1997
)
1.93
"Bromocriptine (Parlodel) has attracted widespread controversy for its use for postpartum lactation suppression because of recent reports of cerebral and cardiovascular complications. "( Fatal myocardial infarction associated with bromocriptine for postpartum lactation suppression.
Dutt, S; Spurway, JH; Wong, F, 1998
)
2
"Bromocriptine has been successfully used to treat hyperprolactinaemic disorders of ovulation; treatment with 5.0 to 7.5 mg daily results in normalisation of serum prolactin concentration and restoration of ovulatory menstruation in most patients with hyperprolactinaemic amenorrhoea or oligomenorrhoea. "( Use of bromocriptine in hyperprolactinaemic anovulation and related disorders.
Franks, S, 1979
)
2.16
"Bromocriptine has been used in premenstrual tension, functional infertility, Nelson's syndrome, and Cushing's disease with variable benefit."( Bromocriptine and endocrine disorders.
Dickstein, G; Spark, RF, 1979
)
2.42
"Bromocriptine has been shown to control prolactin secretion in patients with prolactin-secreting pituitary tumors."( Normalization of visual fields following bromocriptine treatment in hyperprolactinemic patients with visual field constriction.
Aloorkar, SD; Jahangir, RP; Maskati, BT; Pandya, SK; Rege, NR; Sheth, AR; Vaidya, RA, 1978
)
1.25
"Bromocriptine has been implicated in several previous case reports of myocardial infarction in the puerperium."( Recurrent myocardial infarction in a postpartum patient receiving bromocriptine.
Eickman, FM, 1992
)
1.24
"Bromocriptine apparently has cytocidal effects on growth hormone-producing pituitary adenoma in vitro."( Bromocriptine-induced morphological changes in cultured growth hormone-producing pituitary adenoma cells.
Inoue, A; Kitamura, H; Nakai, O; Saito, S, 1989
)
2.44
"Bromocriptine has no activity on the feline mesenterial flow."( The effect of dopamine, apomorphine and piribedil on the mesenterial blood flow of the cat.
Dóda, M; György, L, 1985
)
0.99
"Bromocriptine has an antitumoral effect and treatment can often be stopped after the disappearance of a microadenoma or even of a larger adenoma."( [Functional hyperprolactinemia].
Drapier-Faure, E, 1985
)
0.99

Actions

Bromocriptine therapy may cause regression of prolactinomas, but its effect on nonsecretory pituitary tumors is uncertain. Bromocripine prevented the increase in [3H]E2 binding produced by alpha-methyltyrosine and had no effect on the binding when administered to nontreated rats.

ExcerptReferenceRelevance
"Bromocriptine was found to inhibit selectively the endogenous phosphorylation of a threonine residue(s) in 50,000- and 60,000-dalton proteins in a synaptosome fraction."( Ergopeptine-sensitive calcium-dependent protein phosphorylation system in the brain.
Fisher, SK; Stratford, CA; Ueda, T, 1984
)
0.99
"Bromocriptine was given because of a decline in the response to levodopa, various kinds of "on-off" phenomena, and disabling dyskinesias."( Long-term experience with bromocriptine in advanced parkinsonism. Results after one year's treatment.
Fischer, PA; Schneider, E, 1982
)
1.29
"Bromocriptine, because of its dopaminergic activity, could possibly inhibit TSH secretion. "( Recovery of serum TSH and thyroid hormones after 3'isopropyl-3,5-diiodo-L-thyronine (DIIP) treatment: absence of inhibiting effect of bromocriptine on TSH secretion and evidence for autoregulation of serum T3 levels.
Burger, AG; Salomon-Montavon, NA, 1984
)
1.91
"Bromocriptine therapy may cause regression of prolactinomas and GH producing adenomas, but there is only few reports about the effect of bromocriptine against nonfunctioning pituitary adenomas and there is no reports about its histopathological changes. "( [Size reduction of a nonfunctioning pituitary adenoma after bromocriptine therapy: case report].
Ichihara, K; Kageyama, N; Katoh, T; Kuwayama, A; Sasaki, F; Takahashi, T, 1984
)
1.95
"2) Bromocriptine promotes the FSH and LH secretion from the pituitary and also promotes the reserve of FSH in the pituitary."( [Effects of bromocriptine on FSH and LH secretion in women with euprolactinemic anovulation (author's transl)].
Aisaka, K; Kigawa, T; Minakuchi, H; Mori, H; Sakamoto, S, 1981
)
1.16
"Bromocriptine continued to inhibit binding 24h after a single injection and also after 4 days of drug administration."( Binding of antiparkinsonian ergot derivatives to the dopamine receptor.
Hruska, RE; Silbergeld, EK; Weir, RL, 1981
)
0.98
"Bromocriptine did not cause vasodilatation in either vascular bed."( Comparison of the vasodilator action of dopamine and dopamine agonists in the renal and coronary beds of the dog.
Lang, WJ; Woodman, OL, 1982
)
0.99
"Bromocriptine produced an increase of 50% in VFT."( Reduction in vulnerability to ventricular fibrillation by bromocriptine, a dopamine agonist.
Desilva, RD; Falk, RH; Lown, B, 1981
)
1.23
"Bromocriptine therapy may cause regression of prolactinomas, but its effect on nonsecretory pituitary tumors is uncertain. "( Bromocriptine therapy for "nonfunctioning" pituitary tumors.
Hall, K; Hall, R; Johnston, DG; Kendall-Taylor, P; McGregor, A; Ross, WM, 1981
)
3.15
"Bromocriptine caused some increase in necrosis."( Apoptosis in the anterior pituitary gland of the rat: studies with estrogen and bromocriptine.
Drewett, N; Jacobi, JM; Lloyd, HM; Willgoss, DA, 1993
)
1.23
"Bromocriptine did not increase blink rate 1 hour after application."( Eye-blink rates and depression. Is the antidepressant effect of sleep deprivation mediated by the dopamine system?
Albert, R; Ebert, D; Hammon, G; May, A; Merz, A; Strasser, B, 1996
)
1.02
"bromocriptine). Because there is considerable co-morbidity between alcohol dependence, anxiety, and affective disorders, results from studies of medications used to treat these psychiatric disorders are also reviewed, including the 5-HT agonist buspirone and the noradrenergic agent desipramine."( Neurobehavioural basis for the pharmacotherapy of alcoholism: current and future directions.
Anton, RF, 1996
)
1.02
"Bromocriptine alone did not cause a significant rise in GH concentration in either elderly or young subjects (peak 3.1 +/- 1.1 v."( Contribution of growth hormone-releasing hormone and somatostatin to decreased growth hormone secretion in elderly men.
Levitt, NS; Macfarlane, P; Millar, RP; Soule, SG, 2001
)
1.03
"Bromocriptine was used to destroy the CL initially induced by mating and fresh CL were induced by hormone treatment."( Evidence for a coitally induced 'mnemonic' involved in luteal function in the vole (Microtus agrestis).
Charlton, HM; Milligan, SR; Versi, E, 1979
)
0.98
"Bromocriptine inhibited the increase of prolactin secretion, induced by cimetidine."( [Cimetidine and hyperprolactinemia].
Campanella, N; De Martinis, C; Ghirelli, S; Morosini, PP; Pellegrini, F; Testa, I, 1979
)
0.98
"Bromocriptine did not increase the maximum acid secretion in response to pentastrin, not did it stimulate basal acid secretion."( Bromocriptine potentiation of gastric acid secretion in cats.
Gomez-Pan, A; Hirst, BH; Labib, LA; Reed, JD, 1976
)
2.42
"Bromocriptine evoked a 20% increase (p less than 0.05) in estradiol-17 beta during days 1-3 following onset of treatment, however it suppressed androgen concentrations from 10.7 +/- 1.2 to 5.6 +/- 0.4 pg/ml in the same period."( Effect of bromocriptine administration during mid-pregnancy on the ovary function in the pig.
Szafrańska, B; Ziecik, AJ, 1990
)
1.4
"Bromocriptine can cause not only a decrease in serum prolactin levels but also a regression in the size of prolactinomas in hyperprolactinemic women."( [Effects of therapy and pregnancy on hyperprolactemia caused by a pituitary adenoma. A clinical case].
Falsetti, L; Gastaldi, A; Pasinetti, E; Schivardi, MR, 1989
)
1
"Bromocriptine did not produce this behavior when administered alone."( Effects of age on behavioral responses to dopamine agonists in the rat.
Hara, T; Kishimoto, O; Mizuki, Y; Soeda, K; Ushijima, I; Yamada, M, 1987
)
0.99
"Bromocriptine tended to suppress the activity at low doses (1 and 2mg/kg, ip), but increased the activity at high doses (8 and 16 mg/kg, ip), showing biphasic effects depending on the doses administered."( [Effects of repeated administration of bromocriptine on ambulatory activity in mice, and changes in methamphetamine sensitivity in bromocriptine-experienced mice].
Asami, T; Kuribara, H; Tadokoro, S, 1986
)
1.26
"Bromocriptine prevented the increase in [3H]E2 binding produced by alpha-methyltyrosine and had no effect on the binding when administered to nontreated rats."( Effect of dopamine agonists and antagonists on the binding of [3H]estradiol to its receptors in the anterior pituitary gland of male rats.
Alonso, GE; Burdman, JA; Szijan, I, 1985
)
0.99

Treatment

Bromocriptine treatment (1.5 mg/kg.day) suppressed the delayed-type hypersensitivity response (43% less than the control value) when administered at 10-12 HALO, but had no effect when administering at light onset. BromOCriptine-treated patients, when compared with normal women were characterized by increased numbers of total lymphocytes and CD4+ cells.

ExcerptReferenceRelevance
"Bromocriptine treatment was offered, which resolved the clinical picture."( Neuroleptic malignant syndrome associated with acute organophosphate poisoning: Case report
Angulo, NY; Castaño, PA; Gómez, CC; Quintero, S, 2022
)
1.44
"Bromocriptine treatment has been shown to reduce menstrual bleeding and pain in women with adenomyosis in a pilot clinical trial. "( Bromocriptine inhibits proliferation in the endometrium from women with adenomyosis.
Andersson, JK; Bogavarappu, NR; Frisendahl, C; Gemzell-Danielsson, K; Korsching, E; Lalitkumar, PGL; Pavone, D; Ponandai-Srinivasan, S; Stewart, EA; Tang, Y, 2023
)
3.8
"Bromocriptine treatment exhibits an anti-proliferative effect in the endometrium of women with adenomyosis "( Bromocriptine inhibits proliferation in the endometrium from women with adenomyosis.
Andersson, JK; Bogavarappu, NR; Frisendahl, C; Gemzell-Danielsson, K; Korsching, E; Lalitkumar, PGL; Pavone, D; Ponandai-Srinivasan, S; Stewart, EA; Tang, Y, 2023
)
3.8
"The bromocriptine treatment was associated with a significant decrease in prolactin level (62 %)."( [The Effect of Bromocriptine on Clinical and Laboratory Parameters in Patients With Peripartum Cardiomyopathy].
Abdullaev, TA; Kurbanov, RD; Mirzarakhimova, ST; Tsoy, IA, 2020
)
1.39
"Bromocriptine treatment remodels adipose tissue and the liver dopaminergic system, with increased D1R and TH levels, resulting in higher insulin sensitivity and catabolic function. "( Dopamine D2 receptor agonist, bromocriptine, remodels adipose tissue dopaminergic signalling and upregulates catabolic pathways, improving metabolic profile in type 2 diabetes.
Barra, C; Conde, SV; Costa, A; Gasparini, P; Marques, D; Matafome, P; Melo, BF; Rodrigues, T; Rosendo-Silva, D; Sacramento, JF; Seiça, R; Tavares, G, 2021
)
2.35
"Such bromocriptine treatment at ZT 13 improved (reduced) biomarkers of vascular oxidative/nitrosative stress including plasma TBARS level, aortic NADPH oxidase 4, iNOS and GTPCH 1 levels, and improved other markers of coupled eNOS function, including increased sGC protein level, relative to controls."( Time-of-Day-Dependent Effects of Bromocriptine to Ameliorate Vascular Pathology and Metabolic Syndrome in SHR Rats Held on High Fat Diet.
Cincotta, AH; Ezrokhi, M; Luo, S; Zhang, Y, 2021
)
1.36
"Bromocriptine treatment was associated with high rate of full LV-recovery and low morbidity and mortality in PPCM patients compared with other PPCM cohorts not treated with bromocriptine. "( Bromocriptine for the treatment of peripartum cardiomyopathy: a multicentre randomized study.
Angermann, CE; Bauersachs, J; Berliner, D; Böhm, M; Ehlermann, P; Fischer, D; Franke, A; Haghikia, A; Hilfiker-Kleiner, D; Kindermann, I; Kühl, U; Michels, G; Pfister, R; Podewski, E; Schlitt, A; Schwab, J; Schwarzkopf, M; Sliwa, K; Stangl, V; Vogel-Claussen, J; Westenfeld, R, 2017
)
3.34
"Bromocriptine-treated rats failed to show a preference."( Prosocial effects of prolactin in male rats: Social recognition, social approach and social learning.
Al Saleh, S; Donhoffner, ME; Schink, O; Wood, RI, 2017
)
1.18
"Bromocriptine treatment improves female sexual functioning and slightly affects depressive symptoms in women with elevated prolactin levels and this effect is related to its prolactin-lowering and metabolic effects."( The effect of bromocriptine treatment on sexual functioning and depressive symptoms in women with mild hyperprolactinemia.
Krysiak, R; Okopień, B; Szkróbka, W, 2018
)
2.28
"Bromocriptine treatment known to reduce prolactin levels eliminated pSTAT5 from most brain regions while it did not affect Fos activation following suckling."( Prolactin-induced and neuronal activation in the brain of mother mice.
Cservenák, M; Dobolyi, A; Fazekas, EA; Keller, D; Lőw, P; Oláh, S; Renner, É, 2018
)
1.2
"Bromocriptine treatment had no effect on plasma PRL, but in this breeding attempt clutch size was also independent of plasma PRL."( Circulating breeding and pre-breeding prolactin and LH are not associated with clutch size in the zebra finch (Taeniopygia guttata).
Dawson, A; Meddle, SL; Ryan, CP; Sharp, PJ; Williams, TD, 2014
)
1.12
"Bromocriptine treatment significantly increased Kiss1 mRNA expression in the RP3V, although not to dioestrous levels."( Prolactin regulation of kisspeptin neurones in the mouse brain and its role in the lactation-induced suppression of kisspeptin expression.
Brown, RS; Grattan, DR; Herbison, AE, 2014
)
1.12
"Bromocriptine treatment gradually reduced the prolactin level."( Pituitary Prolactinoma Imaged by 99mTc-Sestamibi SPECT/CT in a Multiple Endocrine Neoplasia Type 1 Patient.
Guo, R; Lv, J; Pan, M; Pan, Y; Zhang, Y, 2016
)
1.16
"Bromocriptine treatment of RNAi flies rescues ALP activity to the level typical of Actin5C-Gal4>w1118 flies."( Dopamine down-regulates activity of alkaline phosphatase in Drosophila: the role of D2-like receptors.
Adonyeva, NV; Alekseev, AA; Bogomolova, EV; Faddeeva, NV; Gruntenko, NE; Rauschenbach, IY, 2010
)
1.08
"In bromocriptine-treated rats, neither plasma gamma-MSH nor NIL gamma-MSH content increased on the HSD versus LSD, and MAP was markedly elevated on the HSD (132+/-3 versus 106+/-3 mm Hg, P<0.001)."( Suppression of gamma-melanocyte-stimulating hormone secretion is accompanied by salt-sensitive hypertension in the rat.
Almog, S; Humphreys, MH; Mayan, H; Ni, XP, 2003
)
0.83
"Some bromocriptine-treated rats also received ovine PRL (1 mg/rat per injection)."( Regulation of hypothalamic neuropeptide Y messenger ribonucleic acid expression during lactation: role of prolactin.
Chen, P; Smith, MS, 2004
)
0.78
"Bromocriptine remains the treatment of choice for managing hyperprolactinemia in most of these cases."( Breastfeeding a baby with mother on Bromocripine.
Faridi, MM; Shah, D; Verma, S, 2006
)
1.06
"2. Bromocriptine treatment during the larval development of D."( Effects of prolactin and bromocriptine in Discoglossus pictus (anuran amphibian. Otth) tadpoles.
Alonso-Bedate, M; Delgado, MJ, 1983
)
1.08
"Bromocriptine treatment of adult male rats resulted in a decrease in testicular testosterone (T) content and a reduction in plasma T levels. "( Effects of bromocriptine on plasma testosterone and gonadotropin levels and testicular lipid fractions in adult rats.
Bartke, A; Rao, MR, 1984
)
2.1
"Bromocriptine treatment (1500 micrograms/day for 24 days) reduced serum and pituitary Prolactin levels, indicating a decrease in prolactin secretion and synthesis."( [Inhibition of prolactin secretion and androgenic function in the adult male rat].
André, M; Boucher, D; Grizard, G; Jarrige, JF, 1982
)
0.99
"Bromocriptine treatment in rats (3 mg/kg per day, 7 days) significantly reduced alpha-msh and aldosterone plasma levels 2 hrs after the final treatment in animals on low, normal and high sodium diets. "( Dopaminergic control of aldosterone: modulation of the response of rat adrenal zona glomerulosa cells to alpha-Msh by pretreatment with bromocriptine or metoclopramide.
Thody, AJ; Vinson, GP; Whitehouse, BJ, 1982
)
1.91
"Bromocriptine treatment (which depresses the level of alpha-MSH in circulating plasma) and metoclopramide (which enhances it) respectively increased and decreased the sensitivity of the response of corticosterone to alpha-MSH in subsequently incubated glomerulosa cells, but had no effect on aldosterone."( alpha-MSH and zona glomerulosa function in the rat.
Bateman, A; Dell, A; McAuley, ME; Vinson, GP; Whitehouse, BJ, 1983
)
0.99
"Bromocriptine treatment results in clinical improvement and inhibition of plasma GH levels in only part of the acromegalic patients. "( The role of prolactin in the inhibitory action of bromocriptine on growth hormone secretion in acromegaly.
Klijn, JG; Lamberts, SW; Liuzzi, A; Stefanko, SZ; van Vroonhoven, CC, 1983
)
1.96
"Bromocriptine treatment was postoperatively started with 5 mg per day on August 25, 1979."( [Cessation of cerebrospinal fluid rhinorrhea by bromocriptine treatment of a patient with invasive prolactinoma].
Daibo, M; Niwa, J; Okuyama, T; Sato, O, 1984
)
1.24
"Bromocriptine treatment is an invaluable adjunct in long-term management of invasive prolactinomas, but surgical intervention is indicated if a CSF fistula results."( Cerebrospinal fluid rhinorrhea caused by bromocriptine therapy of prolactinoma.
Heffernan, LP; Holness, RO; Shlossberg, AH, 1984
)
1.25
"Bromocriptine (BRC) treatment was performed on proestrus or/and estrus morning that means before or after the preovulatory release of LH."( Does corpus luteum function autonomously during estrous cycle in the rat? A possible involvement of LH and prolactin.
Aron, C; Boehm, N; Plas-Roser, S, 1984
)
0.99
"Bromocriptine treatment was given to 38 patients, 13 with abnormal tomographic findings (mean serum PRL greater than 100ng/ml); 18 with suspected pituitary microadenoma (mean serum PRL 94 +/- 2.7 ng/ml) and 7 with idiopathic hyperprolactinaemia (mean serum PRL 65 +/- 4.7 ng/ml)."( Hyperprolactinaemic amenorrhoea in Hong Kong.
Ma, HK; Sung, ML; Tang, LC, 1983
)
0.99
"Bromocriptine treatment in five hyperprolactinemic patients reduced SPL to normal range and improved the sexual function."( Sexual dysfunction associated with hyperprolactinemia in males and females undergoing hemodialysis.
Ben David, M; Gura, V; Levi, J; Maoz, B; Weizman, A; Weizman, R; Wijsenbeek, H; Zevin, D, 1983
)
0.99
"Bromocriptine treatment had no influence on the resumption of ovarian activity, suggesting that prolactin is not involved in the lack of estrus after weaning."( Post weaning plasma progesterone, prolactin and environmental influence in the resumption of ovarian activity in sows.
Crasto, A; d'lstria, M; Delrio, G; Fasano, S; Pierantoni, R; Zicarelli, L, 1983
)
0.99
"Bromocriptine treatment suppressed prolactin concentrations in ewes to minimal values but did not affect ovine placental lactogen concentrations."( The role of steroid hormones, prolactin and placental lactogen on mammary gland development in ewes and heifers.
Chan, JS; Prokopp, S; Rüsse, I; Schallenberger, E; Schams, D, 1984
)
0.99
"Bromocriptine treatment brought about side effects in 6 and norethisterone in 3 women."( Bromocriptine and norethisterone in the treatment of premenstrual syndrome.
Jänne, O; Kauppila, A; Puolakka, J; Rönnberg, L; Ylöstalo, P, 1982
)
2.43
"Bromocriptine should be the treatment of choice in patients with large pituitary tumours with extrasellar extensions, provided close supervision is maintained."( Bromocriptine in management of large pituitary tumours.
Besser, GM; Charlesworth, M; Doniach, I; Halliday, AM; Kingsley, DP; McDonald, WI; Rees, LH; Wass, JA; Williams, J, 1982
)
2.43
"Bromocriptine treatment for 13 days (1 mg/kg per day) caused no changes in LH levels and prolactin levels decreased to normal values (33 micrograms/l)."( Oestrogen--bromocriptine interaction in the control of luteinizing hormone and prolactin secretion in the neonatally oestrogenized female rat.
Aguilar, E; Fernández Galaz, C; Oriol, A; Tejero, A; Vaticón, MD, 1983
)
1.38
"Bromocriptine-treated animals retained less water than did the controls."( Prolactin: a hormonal regulator of the neonatal tissue water reservoir.
Coulter, DM, 1983
)
0.99
"Bromocriptine treatment significantly reduced the enhanced calcium absorption and levels of plasma 1,25(OH)2D3 and alkaline phosphatase but had no significant effect on plasma levels of parathyroid hormone."( Role of prolactin in vitamin D metabolism and calcium absorption during lactation in the rat.
Haussler, MR; Hillyard, CJ; James, MF; MacIntyre, I; Makeen, AM; Pike, JW; Robinson, CJ; Spanos, E, 1982
)
0.99
"Bromocriptine treatment decreased aldosterone and corticosterone responses to stress in WKY but paradoxically increased these responses in SHR."( Effects of bromocriptine on responses to stress in spontaneously hypertensive rats.
Sowers, JR,
)
1.24
"The bromocriptine treated group had significantly less mammary secretion and breast engorgement than the control group and also required less analgesia."( Lactation suppression with bromocriptine.
Hutchison, P; Sill, H, 1981
)
1.04
"Bromocriptine treatment of lactating rats, or removal of the litter, led to a decrease in the number of insulin receptors in the mammary gland and an increase in the concentration of insulin in the serum. "( Regulation of insulin receptors by prolactin in lactating rat mammary gland.
Flint, DJ, 1982
)
1.71
"Bromocriptine treatment was least effective in lowering GH concentrations (basal GH less than 5 ng/ml in 33% of patients with intrasellar tumours)."( Treatment of acromegaly by trans-sphenoidal operation, 90-yttrium implantation and bromocriptine: results in 230 patients.
Quabbe, HJ, 1982
)
1.21
"Bromocriptine treatment of patients with invasive prolactin (PRL)-secreting pituitary adenomas does not invariably result in normalization of the plasma PRL levels. "( Effect of tamoxifen administration on prolactin release by invasive prolactin-secreting pituitary adenomas.
Lamberts, SW; Oosterom, R; Verleun, T, 1982
)
1.71
"Bromocriptine treatment seldom results in permanent cure of hyperprolactinaemic amenorrhoea."( Menstrual function and serum prolactin levels after long-term bromocriptine treatment of hyperprolactinaemic amenorrhoea.
Bergh, T; Nillius, SJ; Wide, L, 1982
)
1.23
"Bromocriptine treatment offers an alternative to surgery in macroprolactinomas and prolactinoma recurrences."( [Bromocriptine induced cystic tumour regression in advanced prolactinomas (author's transl)].
Frick, J; Galvan, G; Irnberger, T, 1981
)
1.89
"Bromocriptine treatment, 2.5-7.5 mg daily for 8-16 weeks lowered prolactin to normal levels in all patients."( Effect of bromocriptine treatment on male infertility associated with hyperprolactinemia.
Ben-David, M; Laufer, N; Livshin, J; Margalioth, EJ; Schenker, JG; Yaffe, H, 1981
)
1.39
"Bromocriptine treatment was stopped as soon as pregnancy was established."( Effects of bromocriptine-induced pregnancy on prolactin-secreting pituitary tumours.
Bergh, T; Larsson, SG; Nillius, SJ; Wide, L, 1981
)
1.37
"Bromocriptine treatment did not result in an increase in sperm count."( Bromocriptine treatment for male infertility.
Andersen, O; Hansen, P; Madsen, H,
)
2.3
"Bromocriptine treatment on Days 2 or 5 of pregnancy produced a rapid decrease in progesterone secretion, but had no effect on luteal function when given on Days 6, 7 or 8 of gestation."( Regulation of progesterone secretion by LH and prolactin during the first half of pregnancy in the mouse.
Barkley, MS; Geschwind, II; Mednick, DL, 1980
)
0.98
"Bromocriptine treatment induced a significant Prl depression at one week (7.3 +/- 4.3 ng/ml vs 23.7 +/- 11.4 ng/ml) and two weeks (5.3 +/- 2.5 ng/ml vs 31.9 +/- 16.4 ng/ml)."( Bromocriptine treatment during early human pregnancy: effect on the levels of prolactin, sex steroids and placental lactogen.
Kivinen, S; Rönnberg, L; Ylikorkala, O, 1980
)
2.43
"In Bromocriptine treated women the average plasma prolactin level decreased from 78.4 +/- 22 ng/ml to 17.0 +/- 3.3 ng/ml during five days of treatment."( [Puerperal inhibition of lactation with metergoline or bromocriptine].
Feige, A; Fischer, T; Frauendorf, A; Gerede, A; Krause, M; Streitmatter, A,
)
0.89
"The bromocriptine treatment caused premature release of some spermatocytes and the presence of polynucleate cells in the seminiferous tubules."( Effect of hypoprolactinaemia and hyperprolactinaemia on LH secretion, endocrine function of testes and structure of seminiferous tubules in boars.
Jedlinska, M; Rozewiecka, L; Ziecik, AJ, 1995
)
0.77
"Bromocriptine treatment gradually reduced serum levels of bioactive GH-like IgGs and IGF-I, with significant falls observed first at 10 months of treatment."( Bioactive GH-like immunoglobulins G in active acromegaly: response to long-term treatment with bromocriptine.
Campino, C; Lopez, JM; Seron-Ferre, M; Szecowka, J, 1995
)
1.23
"Bromocriptine treatment completely blocked the nocturnal surge of PRL."( Absence of short-loop autoregulation of prolactin during late pregnancy in the rat.
Averill, RL; Grattan, DR, 1995
)
1.01
"Bromocriptine treatment (1.5 mg/kg.day) suppressed the delayed-type hypersensitivity response (43% less than the control value) when administered at 10-12 HALO, but had no effect when administered at light onset."( The immunoregulatory effects of prolactin in mice are time of day dependent.
Cincotta, AH; Esperanza, P; Gutierrez, PJ; Knisely, TL; Landry, RJ; Meier, AH; Miers, WR, 1995
)
1.01
"Bromocriptine treatment of APT groups significantly lowered plasma PRL levels from their respective controls."( Prolactin modulates the incidence of diabetes in male and female NOD mice.
Dunbar, JC; Gala, RR; Hawkins, TA, 1994
)
1.01
"Bromocriptine treatment of lactating rats also produces an increase in lipogenesis but fails to decrease the lipolytic response of adipocytes to catecholamines seen after weaning or litter removal."( Bromocriptine treatment increases lipolysis and steady-state levels of G proteins in adipocytes from lactating rats.
Alonso, G; Moreno, FJ; Ros, M, 1994
)
2.45
"Bromocriptine treatment produced no change in overall staining intensity; however, the number of melanotropes staining for the D2long isoform increased significantly."( Regulation of heterogeneity in D2 dopamine receptor gene expression among individual melanotropes in the rat pituitary intermediate lobe.
Chronwall, BM; Dickerson, DS; Huerter, BS; Millington, WR; Sibley, DR, 1994
)
1.01
"Bromocriptine-treated patients, when compared with normal women were characterized by increased numbers of total lymphocytes and CD4+ cells, decreased percentage of CD8+ cells, and increased concentrations of serum IgM."( Cellular and humoral immune parameters in women with pathological hyperprolactinemia before and during treatment with bromocriptine.
Alarcón-Segovia, D; Cárdenas, R; Díaz-Sánchez, V; Larrea, F; López-Karpovitch, X; Piedras, J; Valencia, X, 1994
)
1.22
"Bromocriptine-treated postpartum rats were not different from controls."( Prolactin increases Na+/taurocholate cotransport in isolated hepatocytes from postpartum rats and ovariectomized rats.
Ganguly, T; Hyde, JF; Vore, M, 1993
)
1.01
"Bromocriptine treatment was given at the time of RPY if the animal was in early seasonal quiescence."( Ovarian function and its manipulation in the tammar wallaby, Macropus eugenii.
Cousins, SJ; Hinds, LA; Mate, KE; Rodger, JC, 1993
)
1.01
"Bromocriptine treatment, which significantly suppressed circulating PRL levels, continued through the day of peritoneal macrophage collection."( Bromocriptine reverses the inhibitory effect of macrophages on human sperm motility.
Prins, GS; Scommegna, A; Ye, SH, 1994
)
2.45
"Bromocriptine treatment was associated with transient suppression of anti-dsDNA, and serum cholesterol was reduced significantly through the treatment period."( Efficacy of bromocriptine in an open label therapeutic trial for systemic lupus erythematosus.
Allen, SH; McMurray, RW; Walker, SE; Weidensaul, D, 1995
)
1.39
"Bromocriptine treatment was followed by improved scores on all measures other than mood. "( Motivational deficits after brain injury: effects of bromocriptine in 11 patients.
al-Adawi, S; Greenwood, RJ; Morgan, J; Powell, JH, 1996
)
1.99
"In bromocriptine-treated rats, only the 25-kDa form was present."( Rat prolactin in serum, milk, and mammary tissue: characterization and intracellular localization.
Bousquet, MO; Delpal, S; Lkhider, M, 1996
)
0.81
"Bromocriptine treatment (10 mg daily p.o."( Aldosterone response to metoclopramide in patients with prolactinoma: effect of short-term bromocriptine treatment.
Andonova, K; Andreeva, M; Kalinov, K; Matrozov, P; Stoeva, I; Zacharieva, S, 1996
)
1.24
"A bromocriptine treatment group was included to enable comparisons between bromocriptine and placebo groups, but the study was not powered to show statistical differences between the active treatment groups."( Double-blind comparison of pramipexole and bromocriptine treatment with placebo in advanced Parkinson's disease. International Pramipexole-Bromocriptine Study Group.
Guttman, M, 1997
)
1.12
"Bromocriptine treatment, 2.5 mg b.i.d. "( Prolactin response to thyrotropin-releasing hormone as a guideline for cyclical mastalgia treatment.
Bove, F; Gentile, A; Parmeggiani, U; Rea, N, 1997
)
1.74
"On bromocriptine treatment (47 subjects), 89% of patients reported improved sexual function."( Hyperprolactinaemia in males: a heterogeneous disorder.
Pullan, PT; Walsh, JP, 1997
)
0.81
"Bromocriptine treatment is associated with symptomatic improvement and a reduction in tumour size in most cases."( Hyperprolactinaemia in males: a heterogeneous disorder.
Pullan, PT; Walsh, JP, 1997
)
1.02
"Bromocriptine and estradiol treatments caused a decrease in PP2A-specific activity, but prolactin had no effect."( Protein phosphatase activity in the rat ovary throughout pregnancy and pseudopregnancy.
Berger, TL; Eyster, KM; Rodrigo, MC; Sheth, MV, 1998
)
1.02
"Bromocriptine, used in the treatment of acromegaly, hyperprolactinemia and Parkinson's disease, may be responsible in this last case, for pleuro-pulmonary complications in higher doses. "( [Diffuse interstitial lung disease without pleural involvement and high-dose bromocriptine].
Allais, C; Barrault, MF; Castet, D; Marsaudon, E, 1997
)
1.97
"In bromocriptine-treated sows, weight gain of litters was either drastically reduced or abolished (P < .001) during the week of treatment."( Bromocriptine given orally to periparturient of lactating sows inhibits milk production.
Farmer, C; Robert, S; Rushen, J, 1998
)
2.26
"Bromocriptine treatment for 14 days significantly reduced body fat by 60% and areas under the glucose and insulin curves during a glucose tolerance test by 50 and 46%, respectively."( Bromocriptine reduces obesity, glucose intolerance and extracellular monoamine metabolite levels in the ventromedial hypothalamus of Syrian hamsters.
Cincotta, AH; Luo, S; Meier, AH, 1998
)
2.46
"Bromocriptine treatment did not alter the increase in NPY mRNA levels in the ARH, whereas the treatment greatly attenuated the increase in NPY mRNA in the DMH."( Neuropeptide Y and tuberoinfundibular dopamine activities are altered during lactation: role of prolactin.
Chen, P; Li, C; Smith, MS, 1999
)
1.02
"Bromocriptine treatment for two weeks influenced, to a degree, the physiology of the pinealocytes."( Pineal gland of the Kuwaiti desert gerbil (Gerbillus cheesmani): alterations of its structure by bromocriptine treatment.
Al-Ghaith, L; Sabry, I, 1999
)
1.24
"Bromocriptine treatment was started 100 days after ovulation."( Bromocriptine-induced premature oestrus is associated with changes in the pulsatile secretion pattern of follicle-stimulating hormone in beagle bitches.
Bevers, MM; Dieleman, SJ; Kooistra, HS; Okkens, AC; Popp-Snijders, C; Schoemaker, J; van Haaften, B, 1999
)
2.47
"Bromocriptine treatment was associated with more frequent side effects than the tiopronin."( Inhibition of puerperal lactation with 2-mercaptopropionyl-glycine.
Akrivis, C; Evangelou, A; Fotopoulos, A; Kiortsis, DN; Vezyraki, P, 2000
)
1.03
"Bromocriptine treatment reduced circulating prolactin to nondetectable levels."( Bromocriptine administration lowers serum prolactin and disrupts parental responsiveness in common marmosets (Callithrix j. jacchus).
Jenkins, KT; Lawler, T; Newman, JD; Roberts, RL; Wegner, FH, 2001
)
2.47
"In bromocriptine-treated bitches (20 micrograms kg-1 twice each day, starting 100 days after ovulation until the start of the next oestrous cycle), blood samples were collected before treatment and at 2 week intervals after the start of bromocriptine treatment until the next ovulation."( Role of changes in the pulsatile secretion pattern of FSH in initiation of ovarian folliculogenesis in bitches.
Kooistra, HS; Okkens, AC, 2001
)
0.82
"Bromocriptine treatment resulted in disappearance of the galactorrhea and restoration of the menses and/or ovulation in nine of 18 patients; of these three became pregnant."( Etiology, clinical features and prognosis in secondary amenorrhea.
Hirvonen, E, 1977
)
0.98
"Bromocriptine treatment for 10 to 12 days significantly suppressed mean (+/- SE) serum prolactin (PRL) levels from 65.1 +/- 23.0 to 10.4 +/- 2.0 ng/ml, while LH (12.6 +/- 2.1 to 24.8 +/- 5.9 mIU/ml) and oestradiol (40.1 +/- 7.6 to 111.4 +/- 20.8 pg/ml) levels increased significantly."( Restoration of oestrogen positive feedback effect on LH release by bromocriptine in hyperprolactinaemic patients with galactorrhoea-amenorrhoea.
Aono, T; Koike, K; Kurachi, K; Miyake, A; Yasuda, TS, 1979
)
1.22
"Bromocriptine treatment reduced urinary growth hormone excretion from 220 to 91 ng/24 hours, p less than 0.01, but no significant alterations were induced in the above mentioned kidney function variables."( Kidney function in acromegaly.
Christiansen, JS; Eskildsen, PC; Mogensen, CE; Parving, HH, 1979
)
0.98
"The bromocriptine-treated cycles were all ovulatory according to basal temperature levels."( Bromocriptine treatment of the premenstrual syndrome.
Kullander, S; Svanberg, L, 1979
)
2.18
"Bromocriptine treatment lowered the plasma concentration of placental lactogen as well as that of prolactin."( Mammary growth during pregnancy in hypophysectomized or bromocriptine-treated goats.
Buttle, HL; Cowie, AT; Jones, EA; Turvey, A, 1979
)
1.23
"Bromocriptine treatment normalized the raised serum prolactin levels (46-2900 microgram/l) in all but one woman, in whom the prolactin level decreased from 160 to 38 microgram/l."( Bromocriptine treatment of seven women with primary amenorrhoea and prolactin-secreting pituitary tumours.
Bergh, T; Nillius, SJ; Wide, L, 1979
)
2.42
"Bromocriptine treatment did not significantly alter the FSH and LH levels."( Bromocriptine increases plasma estradiol-17 beta concentration in amenorrhea patients with normal serum prolactin.
Hirvonen, E; Ranta, T; Seppälä, M; Unnérus, HA, 1976
)
2.42
"Bromocriptine treatment was not of value in six patients who had previously not responded or who had lost their response to levodopa."( Bromocriptine in Parkinsonism: long-term treatment, dose response, and comparison with levodopa.
Debono, AG; Marsden, CD; Parkes, JD, 1976
)
2.42
"Bromocriptine treatment decreased PRL secretion in all 10 patients; GH--in all 6 in whom it was increased; TSH--in 2, FSH--in 2 and alpha-subunit in all 6 in whom they were increased."( Mixed pituitary tumours--effects of bromocriptine treatment: Parlodel MR and Parlodel LAR.
Janik, J; Jeske, W; Makowska, A; Słowinska-Srzednicka, J; Walecki, J; Zgliczyński, S; Zgliczyński, W, 1992
)
1.28
"Bromocriptine treatment inhibited pituitary prolactin secretion."( Prolactin stimulates the expression of luteinizing hormone/chorionic gonadotropin receptor messenger ribonucleic acid in the rat corpus luteum and rescues early pregnancy from bromocriptine-induced abortion.
Bjurulf, E; Gåfvels, M; Selstam, G, 1992
)
1.2
"Bromocriptine treatment maintained normal PRL levels but did not significantly reduce GH ones; the association with long-acting somatostatin analog SMS 201-995 by continuous sc pump infusion induced definitive control of GH and somatomedin-C secretion."( Atypical McCune-Albright syndrome associated with growth hormone-prolactin pituitary adenoma: natural history, long-term follow-up, and SMS 201-995--bromocriptine combined treatment results.
Chiarini, V; Cremonini, N; Graziano, E; Sforza, A; Zampa, GA, 1992
)
1.2
"Bromocriptine (BrC) treatment corrected NK function but also made it more efficient at 12:1 than at 25:1 or 50:1 effector:target ratios (ANOVA; P = 0.01)."( Hyperprolactinemia inhibits natural killer (NK) cell function in vivo and its bromocriptine treatment not only corrects it but makes it more efficient.
Alarcón-Segovia, D; Guadarrama, F; Larrea, F; Llorente, L; Méndez, JB; Vidaller, A; Villa, AR, 1992
)
1.23
"Bromocriptine treatment did not influence the histological type of gastric cancer, but caused a significant increase in the labelling index of epithelial cells of the antrum."( Enhancement of dopaminergic agonist bromocriptine of gastric carcinogenesis induced by N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine in Wistar rats.
Baba, M; Iishi, H; Okuda, S; Taniguchi, H; Tatsuta, M, 1992
)
1.28
"Bromocriptine treatment suppressed in vitro responsiveness of HAN-infiltrating lymphocytes and, to some extent, spleen cells, to T- and B-cell mitogens, without altering the relative proportion of lymphocytic subsets."( Associated effects of bromocriptine on neoplastic progression of mouse mammary preneoplastic hyperplastic alveolar nodule line C4 and on hyperplastic alveolar nodule-infiltrating and splenic lymphocyte function.
Heppner, GH; Loeffler, DA; Tsai, SJ, 1992
)
1.32
"Bromocriptine treatment during the immunisation period did not significantly affect the course of arthritis, but treatment at later stages tended to cause exacerbation (significant at the onset period only)."( Increased levels of prolactin during, but not after, the immunisation with rat collagen II enhances the course of arthritis in DBA/1 mice.
Hansson, I; Holmdahl, R; Mattsson, A; Mattsson, R; Rook, GA; Whyte, A, 1992
)
1
"Bromocriptine treatment was commenced on the 10th day (daily 2.5 mg) before carrying out the GnRH loading tests again."( [Gonadotropin releasing hormone loading test with bromocryptin therapy: a new possibility in the differential diagnosis of normo-prolactinaemic anovulation].
Bártfai, G; Koloszár, S, 1992
)
1
"Bromocriptine treatment reduced prolactin levels to those of sham-immunized rats."( The role of prolactin in autoimmune demyelination: suppression of experimental allergic encephalomyelitis by bromocriptine.
Doolittle, TH; Hauser, SL; Massacesi, L; Riskind, PN, 1991
)
1.21
"Bromocriptine treatment substantially improved glucose intolerance and reduced the total and stimulated areas under the glucose tolerance curve by 33% after 14 days of treatment."( Bromocriptine inhibits the seasonally occurring obesity, hyperinsulinemia, insulin resistance, and impaired glucose tolerance in the Syrian hamster, Mesocricetus auratus.
Cincotta, AH; Meier, AH; Schiller, BC, 1991
)
2.45
"Bromocriptine treatment reduced prolactin levels in both strains, but the effect was more rapid in Holtzman than in Long-Evans rats."( Bioactivity of plasma prolactin in ovariectomized, diethylstilbestrol-treated Long-Evans and Holtzman rats after thyrotropin-releasing hormone or bromocriptine administration.
Cannon, M; Hu, L; Lawson, D; Ye, J, 1991
)
1.2
"In bromocriptine-treated (10(-4) mol/L for 24 hs) GH1 cells and AtT-20 cells, the morphologic features were essentially unchanged, compared to the untreated group."( Effects of bromocriptine on experimental GH3 cell tumors.
Kamijo, K; Minase, T; Saito, T; Sato, M; Yachi, A, 1991
)
1.19
"Bromocriptine treatment was associated with tumour reduction in all cases."( Withdrawal of bromocriptine after long-term therapy for macroprolactinomas; effect on plasma prolactin and tumour size.
Croughs, RJ; van 't Verlaat, JW, 1991
)
1.36
"Bromocriptine treatment reduced prolactin from 9.7 +/- 1.4 before to 1.9 +/- 0.6 ng/ml during the treatment (p less than or equal to 0.05) and then returned to the pre-treatment concentrations (10.5 +/- 2.0) following cessation of bromocriptine."( Effect of bromocriptine administration on maintenance of late pregnancy in the pig.
Szafrańska, B; Ziecik, AJ, 1990
)
1.4
"Bromocriptine treatment was initiated approximately two weeks pre partum in three other ewes."( Pathophysiology of the periparturient egg rise in sheep: the role of prolactin.
Armour, J; Bairden, K; Fishwick, G; Holmes, PH; Jeffcoate, IA, 1990
)
1
"Bromocriptine treatment resulted in reduction of serum FSH and alpha-subunit levels to normal, improvement of visual field defects, and improvement in hypogonadism despite lack of demonstrable change in tumor size, as assessed by computed tomographic scan."( Follicle-stimulating hormone- and alpha-subunit-secreting pituitary tumor treated with bromocriptine.
Ridgway, EC; Thorner, MO; Vance, ML, 1985
)
1.21
"The bromocriptine-treated rabbits showed a significant increase in the percentage of the adrenal zona reticularis (21.5 +/- 3.9% of total cortex vs."( Effects of bromocriptine on pituitary and adrenal cortex in pre-adrenarchal rabbits.
Devesa, J; Facchinetti, F; Garcia Caballero, T; Genazzani, AR; Pérez-Fernandez, R, 1989
)
1.15
"Bromocriptine pretreatment diminished blood pressure generally, including cocaine-induced blood pressure increases, and augmented the heart rate after cocaine."( Effects of bromocriptine pretreatment on subjective and physiological responses to i.v. cocaine.
Jaffe, J; Kumor, K; Sherer, M, 1989
)
1.39
"Bromocriptine treatment shortened the length of the cycle by one day in 5-day but not in 4-day cyclic rats, while progesterone treatment lengthened estrous cycles by one day in both groups of rats."( Effect of bromocriptine and progesterone on the length of the ovarian cycle in 4- and 5-day estrous cyclic rats.
Sánchez-Criado, JE; van der Schoot, P, 1989
)
1.4
"Bromocriptine treatment was stopped after 6 years, when pregnancy was diagnosed."( [Effects of therapy and pregnancy on hyperprolactemia caused by a pituitary adenoma. A clinical case].
Falsetti, L; Gastaldi, A; Pasinetti, E; Schivardi, MR, 1989
)
1
"Bromocriptine treatment alters these hormonal relations and reduces lipid synthesis."( Bromocriptine alters hormone rhythms and lipid metabolism in swine.
Cincotta, AH; Meier, AH; Southern, LL, 1989
)
2.44
"Bromocriptine treatment (100-200 micrograms/20 g) yielded a significant decrease in thymulin secretion that could be reversed by coincident treatment with PRL."( Neuroendocrine control of thymic hormonal production. I. Prolactin stimulates in vivo and in vitro the production of thymulin by human and murine thymic epithelial cells.
Bach, JF; Dardenne, M; Gagnerault, MC; Itoh, T; Savino, W, 1989
)
1
"Bromocriptine-treated patients showed significant reductions in prolactin levels and in S-phase fraction of tumour cells within the primary infiltrating carcinoma."( Perioperative bromocriptine adjuvant treatment for operable breast cancer.
Brame, K; Camplejohn, RS; Chaudary, MA; Fentiman, IS; Millis, RR; Wang, DY, 1988
)
1.36
"Bromocriptine treatment was ineffective."( Response of luteinizing hormone secreting pituitary adenoma to a long-acting somatostatin analogue.
Croughs, RJ; Thijssen, JH; van 't Verlaat, JW; van Ginkel, LA; Vos, P, 1988
)
1
"Bromocriptine treatment did not induce any change in the volume fraction, number or location of electron-dense secretory granules."( The effect of bromocriptine on the intermediate lobe of the rat pituitary: an electron-microscopic, morphometric study.
Bäck, N, 1989
)
1.36
"Bromocriptine treatment in intact rats only elevated acid phosphatase activity."( Lysosomal enzymes in the rat harderian gland are altered by either bromocriptine treatment or hypophysectomy and hormone replacement therapy.
Chambers, JP; Chenoweth, PC; Reiter, RJ; Sabry, I; Vaughan, MK, 1988
)
1.23
"Bromocriptine treatment did not significantly change the plasma concentrations of aldosterone before or during the infusions of angiotensin II and ACTH."( Effect of bromocriptine treatment on the aldosterone response to angiotensin II and adrenocorticotropin in idiopathic hyperaldosteronism.
Mellinger, RC; Wisgerhof, M, 1985
)
1.39
"Bromocriptine treatment of normal men lowered serum PRL from 15 +/- 2 to less than 2.5 ng/ml."( The effect of serum prolactin on plasma adrenal androgens and the production and metabolic clearance rate of dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate in normal and hyperprolactinemic subjects.
Chrousos, GP; Cutler, GB; Loriaux, DL; Schiebinger, RJ, 1986
)
0.99
"Bromocriptine treatment (2 mg/day) had no effect on GnRH-R in OVX animals."( Regulation of pituitary gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) receptors by pulsatile GnRH in female rats: effects of estradiol and prolactin.
Barkan, A; Duncan, JA; Herbon, L; Marshall, JC, 1986
)
0.99
"Bromocriptine treatment of the amenorrhea-galactorrhea syndrome with elevated prolactin levels is well recognized. "( Hyperprolactinemia with prolonged amenorrhea reversed with bromocriptine in a menopausal woman.
Ganti, S; Goldman, M; Steinberger, A, 1988
)
1.96
"Oral bromocriptine treatment of hyperprolactinemia is frequently associated with gastrointestinal side effects. "( Vaginal bromocriptine: pharmacology and effect on serum prolactin in normal women.
Fossum, GT; Kletzky, OA; Vermesh, M, 1988
)
1.22
"Bromocriptine treatment reverses this hypertrophy concomitant with inhibiting PRL synthesis and release."( Effects of bromocriptine on prolactin cellular hypertrophy, proliferation and secretory activity in diethylstilbestrol-induced pituitary tumors.
Hymer, WC; Phelps, CJ, 1988
)
1.39
"Bromocriptine treatment resulted in the suppression of serum PRL (m = 23 +/- 2 ng/ml) and the LH surge was delayed by 1-1.5 h and somewhat blunted.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)"( LH subunit mRNA concentrations during LH surge in ovariectomized estradiol-replaced rats.
Barkan, AL; Dee, C; el-Gewely, MR; Haisenleder, DJ; Jameel, ML; Marshall, JC; Ortolano, GA; Papavasiliou, S; Zmeili, SM, 1988
)
1
"Bromocriptine treatment (2.5 mg twice daily) then was given."( Estrogen-induced prolactinoma in a man.
Asscheman, H; Assies, J; de Slegte, R; Gooren, LJ; van Kessel, H, 1988
)
1
"Bromocriptine treatment reduced the prolactin values in both grafted groups, but did not block the advancement of puberty in rats treated with 'young' pituitary grafts."( Mechanisms of precocious puberty induced in male rats by pituitary grafts.
Aguilar, E; Aguilar, R; Bellido, C; Sánchez-Criado, JE, 1988
)
1
"Bromocriptine treatment for the last 3 weeks of the 12-week period, or removal of estradiol for 3 weeks after 9 weeks of treatment did not reverse the changes in CRF-ir even though significant regression of tumor size was achieved."( Hypothalamic corticotropin-releasing factor immunoreactivity is reduced during induction of pituitary tumors by chronic estrogen treatment.
Borgundvaag, B; George, SR; Haas, DA; Sturtridge, WC, 1987
)
0.99
"Bromocriptine treatment increased plasma levels of glucagon, insulin and glucose in control rats."( Effects of hypersecretion of growth hormone and prolactin on plasma levels of glucagon and insulin in GH3-cell-tumor-bearing rats, and the influence of bromocriptine treatment.
Gautvik, K; Haug, E; Johansen, PW; Knudtzon, J, 1986
)
1.19
"Bromocriptine treatment resulted in a dramatic decline of Met-enkephalin-LI in neurointermediate pituitary which was significant by 3 days of treatment."( Met-enkephalin-like immunoreactivity in neurointermediate pituitary is decreased by DA receptor stimulation.
George, SR; Kertesz, M,
)
0.85
"Bromocriptine treatment in April (seasonal diapause) was followed by a significant reduction in prolactin concentrations and reduced growth rate of joeys belonging to treated females."( Effects of lactation and season on plasma prolactin concentrations and response to bromocriptine during lactation in the Bennett's wallaby (Macropus rufogriseus rufogriseus).
Curlewis, JD; Loudon, AS; McNeilly, AS; White, AS, 1986
)
1.22
"Bromocriptine pretreatment severely reduced incorporation of radiolabel at 07.00 h to levels comparable with controls at 16.00 h and completely inhibited the stimulatory effect of insulin at 07.00 h."( Prolactin permits the expression of a circadian variation in lipogenic responsiveness to insulin in hepatocytes of the golden hamster (Mesocricetus auratus).
Cincotta, AH; Meier, AH, 1985
)
0.99
"Bromocriptine treatment induced: (1) a significant decrease (p less than 0.001) in growth velocity from (mean +/- SEM) 8.6 +/- 0.4 to 5.3 +/- 1.5 cm/year in boys and from 7.1 +/- 0.2 to 4.6 +/- 0.6 cm/year in girls; (2) a twofold mean increase in skeletal maturation rate."( Bromocriptine treatment in tall adolescents: two years of clinical experience.
Brion, DE; Job, JC; Murrieta, D, 1985
)
2.43
"Bromocriptine treatment resulted in a sharp but reversible decline of serum prolactin levels followed by a significant reduction of milk production."( Serum prolactin levels in women with excessive milk production. Normalization by transitory prolactin inhibition.
Breckwoldt, M; Geisthövel, F; Peters, F, 1985
)
0.99
"Bromocriptine treatment did not alter the distribution of microtubules and actin filaments in fibroblasts, whereas colchicine changed the distribution of microtubules in both prolactinoma cells and fibroblasts."( Immunofluorescence demonstration of tubulin and actin in estrogen-induced rat prolactinoma cells in vitro. Alteration of their distribution after bromocriptine, colchicine and cytochalasin B treatments.
Hashi, K; Minase, T; Mori, M; Niwa, J, 1985
)
1.19
"The bromocriptine treatment significantly decreased all the major organelles involved in PRL synthesis when expressed in absolute volume per single tumor cell, although it decreased only Golgi apparatus when expressed in relative volume within the cells."( Cytosuppressive effect of bromocriptine on human prolactinomas: stereological analysis of ultrastructural alterations with special reference to secretory granules.
Arita, N; Hayakawa, T; Matsumoto, K; Mogami, H; Mori, H; Mori, S; Saitoh, Y, 1986
)
1.05
"Bromocriptine treatment can restore fertility and be safely withdrawn during pregnancy even in patients presenting with large tumors."( Prolactin levels in pregnancy: comparison of normal subjects with patients having micro- or macroadenomas after early bromocriptine withdrawal.
McCorkell, S; McDonald, D; Niles, N; Woodhouse, NJ, 1985
)
1.2
"Bromocriptine pretreatment reduced (70%) both the high and low affinity receptor numbers and increased the affinity of the high affinity receptor at 07.00 h."( Prolactin permits the expression of a circadian variation in insulin receptor profile in hepatocytes of the golden hamster (Mesocricetus auratus).
Cincotta, AH; Meier, AH, 1985
)
0.99
"Both bromocriptine treatment and selective microsurgical tumor extirpation are successful."( [Prolactin producing hypophyseal adenoma: diagnosis and therapeutic possibilities].
Froesch, ER; Landolt, AM, 1985
)
0.72
"Bromocriptine treatment induced preferentially a reduction of little GH."( Changes of molecular forms of growth hormone in bromocriptine treated acromegaly in relation to changes of somatomedin-C and clinical response.
Croughs, RJ; Donker, GH; Nortier, JW; Schwarz, F; Thijssen, JH, 1985
)
1.25
"Treatment with bromocriptine decreased the plasma concentrations of prolactin to the basal range throughout late pregnancy."( Maternal prolactin levels during late pregnancy and nurturing behavior of offspring in mice.
Amano, I; Ee, OK; Koibuchi, N; Masuda, S; Sairenji, TJ; Sato, S; Shimokawa, N; Yajima, H, 2022
)
1.06
"Treatment with bromocriptine increases the protein expression of Prlr and D2 r in the cardiac tissue of rats with cardiac hypertrophy."( The regulatory effect of bromocriptine on cardiac hypertrophy by prolactin and D2 receptor modulation.
Aguayo-Cerón, KA; Calzada-Mendoza, CC; Méndez-Bolaina, E; Ocharan-Hernández, ME; Romero-Nava, R, 2020
)
1.2
"Treatment with bromocriptine reduced cell viability of AML cells by activation of the apoptosis program and induction of myeloid differentiation. "( Repositioning of bromocriptine for treatment of acute myeloid leukemia.
Banús-Mulet, A; Cornet-Masana, JM; Díaz-Beyá, M; Esteve, J; Etxabe, A; Lara-Castillo, MC; Nomdedeu, M; Risueño, RM; Torrente, MÁ, 2016
)
1.13
"Treatment with bromocriptine appears promising, although women would be unable to breastfeed due to suppression of lactation."( Interventions for treating peripartum cardiomyopathy to improve outcomes for women and babies.
Alfirevic, Z; Carlin, AJ; Gyte, GM, 2010
)
0.7
"Rats treated with bromocriptine exhibited rotational sensitisation but no AIMs."( The "motor complication syndrome" in rats with 6-OHDA lesions treated chronically with L-DOPA: relation to dose and route of administration.
Cenci, MA; Lindgren, HS; Lundblad, M; Ohlin, KE; Rylander, D, 2007
)
0.66
"Treatment with bromocriptine, an inhibitor of prolactin secretion, prevents the development of PPCM, whereas forced myocardial generation of 16 kDa prolactin impairs the cardiac capillary network and function, thereby recapitulating the cardiac phenotype of PPCM."( A cathepsin D-cleaved 16 kDa form of prolactin mediates postpartum cardiomyopathy.
Ansari, A; Balligand, JL; Bonda, T; Desjardins, F; Doerries, C; Drexler, H; Forster, O; Heusch, G; Hilfiker, A; Hilfiker-Kleiner, D; Kaminski, K; Klein, G; Landmesser, U; Luchtefeld, M; Nguyen, NQ; Podewski, E; Poli, V; Quint, A; Schaefer, A; Schneider, MD; Schulz, R; Sliwa, K; Struman, I; Zschemisch, NH, 2007
)
0.68
"Treatment with bromocriptine caused a decrease in the E/A ratio in patients with decreased growth hormone levels, but not in patients in whom the growth hormone level remained unchanged."( The influence of bromocriptine and transsphenoidal surgery on urinary androgen metabolite excretion in acromegaly.
Frölich, M; Moolenaar, AJ; Roelfsema, F, 1984
)
0.95
"Treatment with bromocriptine further diminished the anterior lobe PRL content, whereas haloperidol partially inhibited this tumor-mediated diminution."( Hyperprolactinemia exerts a negative effect on the beta-endorphin content of the rat neurointermediate pituitary lobe.
Bons, EG; Hackeng, WH; Lamberts, SW; Oosterom, R; Uitterlinden, P; Verleun, T; Zuiderwijk, JM, 1984
)
0.61
"Treatment with bromocriptine was associated with the resumption of menses, and no significant change in mean gonadotropin concentrations."( Abnormal patterns of pulsatile luteinizing hormone secretion in women with hyperprolactinemia and amenorrhea: responses to bromocriptine.
Case, GD; Frager, M; Kelch, RP; Marshall, JC; Sauder, SE, 1984
)
0.81
"Treatment with bromocriptine (10 days) results in a decrease of serum PRL levels and pituitary PRL contents."( [Validity of radioimmunoassay for blood and pituitary prolactin in the male rat. Effect of bromocriptine and thyrotropin-releasing hormone].
André, M; Boucher, D; Grizard, G, 1981
)
0.82
"Treatment with bromocriptine appeared to affect the concentrations of progesterone in the blood during dioestrus."( Reduction of 5-day cycle length of female rats by treatment with bromocriptine.
Uilenbroek, JT; van der Schoot, P, 1983
)
0.84
"Treatment with bromocriptine (CB154) did not depress prolactin levels at either time of the year but during February to June a single injection of 5 mg/kg body wt induced development of the quiescent corpus luteum (CL) and the diapausing embryo was reactivated."( Seasonal patterns of circulating progesterone and prolactin and response to bromocriptine in the female tammar Macropus eugenii.
Hinds, LA; Tyndale-Biscoe, CH, 1984
)
0.84
"On treatment with bromocriptine, 5 mg daily for 3 days, his visual acuity and field was remarkably improved."( [Size reduction of a nonfunctioning pituitary adenoma after bromocriptine therapy: case report].
Ichihara, K; Kageyama, N; Katoh, T; Kuwayama, A; Sasaki, F; Takahashi, T, 1984
)
0.83
"Treatment with bromocriptine was started on day 5 of each menstrual cycle and continued for 7 days per cycle."( Bromocriptine therapy of luteal insufficiency accompanied with hyperprolactinemia in the follicular phase.
Kano, T; Nishikawa, K, 1983
)
2.05
"Pretreatment with bromocriptine may provide for postoperative recovery this never occurring after surgery alone, whether or not it is followed by radiotherapy."( [Bromocriptine treatment of prolactinomas and primary hyperprolactinemia (author's transl)].
Christiaens, JL; Fermon, C; Fossati, P; Grenier, JL; Linquette, M; Stevenard, C, 1982
)
1.5
"Treatment with bromocriptine suppressed levels to undetectable values (less than 1.4 micrograms/l plasma) between days 40 and 100 of pregnancy."( Effects of metoclopramide and bromocriptine on prolactin secretion in the pregnant ewe.
Cunningham, FJ; Fitzgerald, BP, 1982
)
0.89
"On treatment with bromocriptine, 20 mg daily for 25 months, the intrasellar tumor recurrence had diminished in size and a suprasellar extension had almost disappeared."( Bromocriptine therapy for "nonfunctioning" pituitary tumors.
Hall, K; Hall, R; Johnston, DG; Kendall-Taylor, P; McGregor, A; Ross, WM, 1981
)
2.03
"Treatment with bromocriptine and TNP acts indirectly and directly on vascular formation and may provide a useful chemotherapeutic modality for pituitary tumors."( Effect of angiogenesis inhibitor TNP-470 on vascular formation in pituitary tumors induced by estrogen in rats.
Takechi, A, 1994
)
0.63
"Treatment with bromocriptine (0.2 mg kg-1 per os and 0.05 mg kg-1 i.m.; n = 4) decreased mean prolactin concentrations throughout the experiment as well as during two 4 h sampling periods (P < 0.01)."( Effect of hypoprolactinaemia and hyperprolactinaemia on LH secretion, endocrine function of testes and structure of seminiferous tubules in boars.
Jedlinska, M; Rozewiecka, L; Ziecik, AJ, 1995
)
0.63
"Treatment with bromocriptine + gonadotropin remains the simplest; the treatment protocol based on geserelin depot + gonadotropin proved to be more efficacious."( [Bromocryptin + gonadotropin vs. goserelin + gonadotropin in ovulation induction in patients with polycystic ovaries].
De Vita, V, 1995
)
0.64
"Pretreatment with bromocriptine (5 mg/kg, i.p., 7 days) completely protected against the decrease in mouse striatal dopamine and its metabolites induced by intraventricular injection of 6-hydroxydopamine after intraperitoneal administration of desipramine, but similar pretreatment with L-DOPA/carbidopa (75/7.5 mg/kg, i.p., 7 days) showed only partial protective effect. "( Bromocriptine protects mice against 6-hydroxydopamine and scavenges hydroxyl free radicals in vitro.
Asanuma, M; Kawai, M; Kohno, M; Masumizu, T; Mori, A; Ogawa, N; Tanaka, K, 1994
)
2.07
"Pretreatment of bromocriptine completely protected mice against the decreases in striatal DA and its metabolites induced by intracerebroventricular injection of 6-OHDA, while levodopa/carbidopa had no protective effects."( Levodopa and dopamine agonists in the treatment of Parkinson's disease: advantages and disadvantages.
Ogawa, N, 1994
)
0.62
"Treatment with bromocriptine to suppress PRL secretion for 48 h led to a 57% decrease in milk yield with a concomitant decrease in milk protein and lactose yields, but no decrease in fat output."( Evidence that growth hormone stimulates milk synthesis by direct action on the mammary gland and that prolactin exerts effects on milk secretion by maintenance of mammary deoxyribonucleic acid content and tight junction status.
Flint, DJ; Gardner, M, 1994
)
0.63
"Treatment with bromocriptine, a D2 agonist, accelerates compensation of postural and ocular symptoms."( Vestibular compensation is affected by treatment with dopamine active agents.
Dell'Anna, ME; Petrosini, L, 1993
)
0.63
"Treatment with bromocriptine restored normal cycles, and the incidence of pregnancies was 38.5%."( Hyperprolactinaemia and reproductive failure.
Gunaratne, M, 1993
)
0.63
"Treatment with bromocriptine caused a significant decrease in serum concentrations of PRL during both seasons (P < .01)."( Effects of bromocriptine treatment on the expression of sexual behavior in male sheep (Ovis aries).
Gloria, E; Katz, LS; Regisford, C, 1994
)
1.02
"Treatment with bromocriptine (5 mg/kg/day) reduced serum prolactin levels slightly on day 3 and significantly (94% to 2.1 ng/ml) on day 10 post alloantigen injection."( Suppression of prolactin and cytotoxic T-lymphocyte activity in PCB-treated mice.
De Krey, GK; Hollingshead, NC; Kerkvliet, NI; Smith, BB, 1994
)
0.63
"Treatment with bromocriptine leads to rapid improvement in perimetry and visual acuity as well as tumour shrinkage, obviating the need for pituitary surgery."( Rapid resolution of visual abnormalities with medical therapy alone in patients with large prolactinomas.
Crawford, PJ; Dewar, JH; Hall, K; Kendall-Taylor, P; Mbanya, JC; Mendelow, AD, 1993
)
0.63
"The treatment of bromocriptine and L-DOPA protected the neurons compared with single administration of bromocriptine."( Effects of bromocriptine and/or L-DOPA on neurons in substantia nigra of MPTP-treated C57BL/6 mice.
Fukuda, T; Tanaka, J; Watabe, K, 1996
)
1.01
"Pretreatment with bromocriptine selectively reduced the number of cocaine infusions obtained."( Effects of dopamine agonists and antagonists on cocaine-induced operant responding for a cocaine-associated stimulus.
Deroche, V; Koob, GF; Weiss, F; Weissenborn, R, 1996
)
0.62
"The treatment with bromocriptine does not influence these parameters."( Bromocriptine has little direct effect on murine lymphocytes, the immunomodulatory effect being mediated by the suppression of prolactin secretion.
Neidhart, M, 1997
)
2.06
"Pretreatment with bromocriptine (0.1 mg/kg) or desipramine (1 mg/kg) increased cardiac output in mixed responders and increased systemic vascular resistance in vascular responders similar to the differential effects noted with cocaine."( Effects of proposed treatments for cocaine addiction on hemodynamic responsiveness to cocaine in conscious rats.
Gan, Q; Knuepfer, MM, 1997
)
0.62
"Treatment with bromocriptine was very effective and five months after the poisoning, MR and (11)C-NMSP/PET images showed improvement, concomitantly with the disappearance of the neuropsychiatric symptoms."( Magnetic resonance imaging and 11C-N-methylspiperone/positron emission tomography studies in a patient with the interval form of carbon monoxide poisoning.
Haida, M; Kozuma, R; Shinohara, Y; Takagi, S; Takahashi, W; Yoshii, F, 1998
)
0.64
"Treatment with bromocriptine was effective in treating some induced and spontaneous autoimmune disease in experimental models."( Bromocriptine treatment of systemic lupus erythematosus.
Walker, SE, 2001
)
2.09
"Treatment with bromocriptine restored ovulation and menstruation in 9 of the 13 amenorrheic patients and in 5 of 6 oligomenorrheic women."( Bromocriptine for induction of ovulation in normoprolactinaemic post-pill anovulation.
Bennink, HJ; van der Steeg, HJ, 1977
)
2.03
"Treatment with bromocriptine resulted in a significant fall of systolic and diastolic blood pressure in supine and upright position accompanied by a marked reduction in plasma and urinary noradrenaline but without effect on adrenaline."( Effect of the dopamine agonist bromocriptine on blood pressure, catecholamines and renin activity in acromegalics at rest, following exercise and during insulin induced hypoglycemia.
Hökfelt, B; Nilsson, A, 1978
)
0.88
"Treatment with bromocriptine, 30-55 mg daily, in 13 acromegalics for 1-15 months, resulted in a 60% decrease in growth hormone secretion, as judged from the excretion of growth hormone in 24-h urine. "( Long-term treatment of acromegaly with bromocriptine.
Eskildsen, PG; Nerup, J; Svendsen, PA; Vang, L, 1978
)
0.88
"Treatment with bromocriptine for 6 months reduced the plasma 1,25(OH)2-vitamin D3 level to 40 +/- 13 (SD) pg/ml, p less than 0.01 and the 24,25(OH)2-vitamin D level to 5.4 +/- 1.7 (SD) ng/ml, p less than 0.05."( Acromegaly and vitamin D metabolism: effect of bromocriptine treatment.
Bishop, JE; Eskildsen, PC; Lund, B; Norman, AW; Sørensen, OH, 1979
)
0.86
"Treatment with bromocriptine (Parlodel) gave satisfactory results in all patients."( Male hyperprolactinemia:effects on fertility.
Ben-David, M; Laufer, N; Segal, S; Yaffe, H, 1979
)
0.6
"Treatment with bromocriptine, 2.5 mg b.i.d., p.o., or L-Dopa, 500 mg, p.o., did not suppress serum prolactin and menstrual cycle was not resumed."( Failure of bromocriptine to suppress prolactin in majeptil-induced hyperprolactinemia.
Ben-David, M; Polishuk, WZ; Spitz, IM; Yarkoni, S, 1978
)
0.99
"Treatment with bromocriptine and HMG resulted in pregnancy."( [Acute pituitary failure as the presentation of a prolactin cell adenoma during a pregnancy made possible by bromocriptine (author's transl)].
Buvat, J; Decoulx, M; Gasnault, JP; Gauthier, A; Laine, E; Linquette, M; Pagniez, I, 1977
)
0.81
"Treatment with bromocriptine and return of menstruation cannot be considered a cause-and-effect relationship."( Induction of menstruation with bromocriptine.
Hahn, L, 1978
)
0.88
"Rats treated with bromocriptine (5 mg/kg) or with hydergine (3 mg/kg), showed a stimulation of adenylate cyclase activity in the striatum, but not in the hypothalamus."( Bromocriptine and hydergine: a comparison on striatal or hypothalamic adenylate cyclase activity.
Portaleone, P, 1978
)
2.02
"Treatment with bromocriptine corrected the amenorrhea and hyperprolactinemia, and the patient inadvertently became pregnant."( Sellar enlargement with hyperprolactinemia and a Rathke's pouch cyst.
Holgate, RC; Kovacs, K; Pritzker, KP; Schwartz, ML; Trokoudes, KM; Walfish, PG, 1978
)
0.6
"Treatment with bromocriptine (about 0.4 mg/kg every 3 days) lowered and maintained the plasma concentration of prolactin at less than 12 ng/ml."( The importance of prolactin for lactation in the ewe.
Campbell, JJ; Findlay, JK; Hooley, RD, 1978
)
0.6
"Treatment with bromocriptine was associated with prompt improvement in glucose intolerance, with elimination of insulin requirement within 72 hours of institutions of this therapy."( Complete remission of acromegaly with medical treatment.
Dickstein, G; Pallotta, J; Spark, RF, 1979
)
0.6
"Treatment with bromocriptine caused no untoward effect on the blood clotting, while in the DS group a slower return to normal antithrombin III could be observed."( Study of the suppression of lactation and the influence on blood clotting with bromocriptine (CB 154) (Parlodel): a double blind comparison with diethylstilboestrol.
Abildgaard, U; Meling, AB; Nilsen, PA, 1976
)
0.82
"Treatment with bromocriptine lowers prolactin concentrations and rapidly repairs the reproductive defect."( Clinical and endocrine features of hyperprolactinaemic amenorrhoea.
Franks, S; Hull, MG; Jacobs, HS; Murray, MA; Nabarro, JD; Steele, SJ, 1976
)
0.6
"Treatment with bromocriptine in patients with normal gonadotrophins restores ovulation when the infertility is due to prolactin excess."( Incidence and significance of hyperprolactinaemia in women with amenorrhea.
Franks, S; Jacobs, HS; Jequier, AM; Murray, MA; Nabarro, JD; Steele, SJ, 1975
)
0.59
"Treatment with bromocriptine (CB) stimulates the release of secretory granules from human prolactinomas by exocytosis in spite of a remarkable decrease in serum prolactin (PRL) levels. "( Decreased prolactin level in secretory granules and their increased exocytosis in estrogen-induced pituitary hyperplasia in rats treated with a dopamine agonist.
Itoh, Y; Maeda, T; Mori, H; Moriwaki, K; Sawada, K, 1991
)
0.63
"Pretreatment with bromocriptine conferred no protection against the syndrome."( Porcine stress syndrome: an animal model for the neuroleptic malignant syndrome?
Keck, PE; McElroy, SL; Pope, HG; Seeler, DC, 1990
)
0.6
"Pretreatment with bromocriptine microcapsules inhibited both basal and FCA-induced pituitary ODC activity, as well as Prl secretion."( Freund's complete adjuvant induces ornithine decarboxylase activity in the central nervous system of male rats and triggers the release of pituitary hormones.
Larson, DF; Neidhart, M, 1990
)
0.6
"Treatment with bromocriptine (5 mg/kg) relieved the parkinsonian symptoms, but the efficacy of this treatment appeared to decrease slightly with time."( Effects of chronic treatment of MPTP monkeys with bromocriptine alone or in combination with SKF 38393.
Bédard, PJ; Di Paolo, T; Rouillard, C, 1990
)
0.87
"When treatment with bromocriptine was instituted (10 mg/daily) mean serum prolactin concentration fell from 490 ng/ml to 108 ng/ml."( [Effects of therapy and pregnancy on hyperprolactemia caused by a pituitary adenoma. A clinical case].
Falsetti, L; Gastaldi, A; Pasinetti, E; Schivardi, MR, 1989
)
0.59
"Treatment with bromocriptine was stopped when pregnancy was diagnosed but 6 weeks later the prolactinoma had regrown with suprasellar extension and lateral invasion of the cavernous sinus."( Rapid regression through bromocriptine therapy of a suprasellar extending prolactinoma during pregnancy.
Jacobs, HS; Tan, SL, 1986
)
0.91
"Treatment with bromocriptine, a dopamine receptor agonist, resulted in suppression of serum prolactin and normal estrous cycles."( Mechanism of anestrus in rats treated with an antihypertensive agent, losulazine hydrochloride.
Higgins, MJ; Johnson, GA; Mesfin, GM; Morris, DF, 1987
)
0.61
"Treatment with bromocriptine markedly reduced the level of serum prolactin together with improvement of sexual libido and potency."( Hyperprolactinemia and impotence.
el-Beheiry, A; el-Kamshoushi, A; el-Sabah, K; Hussein, S; Souka, A, 1988
)
0.61
"Treatment with bromocriptine (1 mg/kg body weight/day), resulted in the expected decrease in plasma levels of prolactin and an increase in basal plasma LH levels to the levels found in control groups."( Possible role of prolactin in the induction of hypogonadism by chronic alcohol treatment in the male rat.
Agrasal, C; Esquifino, AI; Fermoso, J; Martin, I; Mateos, A, 1988
)
0.61
"Treatment with bromocriptine was significantly more effective than placebo in alleviating withdrawal symptoms."( Bromocriptine-desipramine protocol in treatment of cocaine addiction.
Billett, W; Giannini, AJ, 1987
)
2.06
"Treatment with bromocriptine was associated with normalization of plasma PRL levels, elevation of plasma gonadotropin levels, and the onset of menopausal hot flashes in both patients."( Pathological hyperprolactinemia suppresses hot flashes in menopausal women.
Marut, EL; Schneider, AB; Scoccia, B; Scommegna, A, 1988
)
0.61
"Treatment with bromocriptine markedly reduced pituitary ARN and plasma prolactin levels without altering plasma testosterone levels or hypothalamic ARN."( Effects of bromocriptine and ectopic pituitary transplants on pituitary and hypothalamic nuclear androgen receptors in the male hamster.
Bartke, A; Chandrashekar, V; Hodges, S; Meyers, R; Prins, GS; Reiher, J, 1988
)
1
"Treatment with bromocriptine after DES implants were removed led to a significant reduction in pituitary tumour weight and a decrease in serum prolactin concentrations and prolactin mRNA."( Influence of bromocriptine and oestrogen on prolactin synthesis, secretion and tumour growth in vivo in rats.
Friesen, HG; Thliveris, JA; Vrontakis, ME, 1987
)
0.98
"Treatment with bromocriptine was continued and there was spontaneous progression of normal puberty; the serum testosterone continued to rise, and height maintained the 50th centile."( Normal growth and pubertal development during bromocriptine treatment for a prolactin-secreting pituitary macroadenoma.
Atkinson, AB; Carson, DJ; Dalzell, GW; Sheridan, B, 1987
)
0.87
"Treatment with bromocriptine or methergoline corrected the excessive prolactin production and associated symptoms."( Hyperprolactinemia and mammary prostheses. A report of eight cases.
Ruíz-Velasco, V, 1986
)
0.61
"Treatment with bromocriptine reduced the tumour size and the prolactin level to 2440 mU/l."( Discordant responses of prolactinoma to two different dopamine agonists.
Ahmed, SR; Shalet, SM, 1986
)
0.61
"Treatment with bromocriptine (BRC) had no influence on tumor growth or on the immune reactivity of tumor-bearing hosts."( Immunomodulation in rats by transplantable anterior pituitary tumors.
Berczi, I; Friesen, HG; Nagy, E; Sehon, AH, 1985
)
0.61

Toxicity

Oral administration of prednisolone significantly reduces the incidence of acute adverse effects following depot bromocriptine. A high incidence of adverse events was noted especially at the initiation of therapy with both compounds. Nausea was the most commonly reported adverse event in the bromOCriptine-QR group.

ExcerptReferenceRelevance
" A high incidence of adverse events was noted especially at the initiation of therapy with both compounds: nausea, dizziness, vomiting, asthenia, headache, and decrease in blood pressure occurred at a similar incidence and extent during the use of pergolide and bromocriptine."( A comparison of the efficacy and safety of pergolide and bromocriptine in the treatment of hyperprolactinemia.
Lamberts, SW; Quik, RF, 1991
)
0.71
"in these 24-week studies comprising a total of 157 hyperprolactinemic patients, a once daily administration of pergolide was shown to be as safe and effective as the two to four times daily ingestion of bromocriptine."( A comparison of the efficacy and safety of pergolide and bromocriptine in the treatment of hyperprolactinemia.
Lamberts, SW; Quik, RF, 1991
)
0.71
" It is considered that a hitherto unknown, severe though rare side-effect of bromocriptine is unlikely to be reported after such long experience."( The safety of bromocriptine in long-term use: a review of the literature.
Weil, C, 1986
)
0.86
" Moreover, exposure to this drug in utero has no adverse influence on the postnatal development."( Bromocriptine in pregnancy: safety aspects.
Krupp, P; Monka, C, 1987
)
1.72
" Each agent is associated with its own specific adverse effects."( Adverse effects of fertility drugs.
Adashi, EY; Derman, SG, 1994
)
0.29
" The adverse effect during the therapy were mild and transient."( The efficacy, tolerability and safety of Parlodel LAR versus Parlodel in hyperprolactinemia.
Bednarek-Tupikowska, G; Bohdanowicz-Pawlak, A; Bolanowski, M; Jedrzejak, JA; Lancranjan, I; Milewicz, A, 1993
)
0.29
" The plasma prolactin levels, clinical signs and symptoms of hyperprolactinemia, physical examination, blood pressure, heart rate assessments and adverse events were recorded during the study."( Tolerability, safety and efficacy of two formulations of Parlodel--a slow release oral form (SRO) versus registered Parlodel capsules.
Atasü, T; Biberoğlu, K; Kandemir, O; Shabgahi, B, 1994
)
0.29
" There are also environmental chemicals that readily enter breast milk and may induce adverse effects."( Adverse effects of drugs and chemicals in breast milk on the nursing infant.
Kacew, S, 1993
)
0.29
"We report the cases of two patients who experienced a poorly known adverse effect of bromocriptine-alopecia."( Alopecia: an adverse effect of bromocriptine.
Fabre, N; Montastruc, JL; Rascol, O, 1993
)
0.8
" Motor side effects and adverse events were recorded at each regular clinic visit."( Early institution of bromocriptine in Parkinson's disease inhibits the emergence of levodopa-associated motor side effects. Long-term results of the PRADO study.
Blümner, E; Danielczyk, W; Gerlach, M; Kaiser, HJ; Kraus, PH; Letzel, H; Przuntek, H; Riederer, P; Uberla, K; Welzel, D, 1996
)
0.61
" depot bromocriptine (Parlodel-LAR, Sandoz, Basel, Switzerland), but adverse effects following the first injection may still be a significant problem."( Oral prednisolone supplement abolishes the acute adverse effects following initiation of depot bromocriptine therapy.
Besser, GM; Grossman, AB; Jain, A; Jenkins, PJ; Jones, SL, 1996
)
0.97
"Concurrent oral administration of prednisolone significantly reduces the incidence of acute adverse effects following depot bromocriptine."( Oral prednisolone supplement abolishes the acute adverse effects following initiation of depot bromocriptine therapy.
Besser, GM; Grossman, AB; Jain, A; Jenkins, PJ; Jones, SL, 1996
)
0.72
" In early therapy, the emergent adverse experiences more common with the ropinirole group compared with placebo were nausea, somnolence, leg edema, abdominal pain, vomiting, dyspepsia, and hallucinations."( The safety of ropinirole, a selective nonergoline dopamine agonist, in patients with Parkinson's disease.
Brooks, DJ; Brunt, E; Fuell, D; Korczyn, A; Poewe, W; Quinn, NP; Rascol, O; Schrag, AE; Stocchi, F,
)
0.13
" Clinicians using dopaminergic pharmacotherapy should assess patients for this possible adverse effect."( Adverse effect of dopamine agonist therapy in a patient with motor-intentional neglect.
Barrett, AM; Crucian, GP; Heilman, KM; Schwartz, RL, 1999
)
0.3
" Therefore, it appears that prolonged medical therapy is effective and safe in macroprolactinomas."( Efficacy and safety of bromocriptine in the treatment of macroprolactinomas.
Ben Slama, C; Bouguerra, R; Chamakhi, S; Essaïs, O; Hadjri, S; Hamzaoui, J; Marrakchi, Z; Zidi, B, 2002
)
0.63
"5 million adverse drug reaction (ADR) reports for 8620 drugs/biologics that are listed for 1191 Coding Symbols for Thesaurus of Adverse Reaction (COSTAR) terms of adverse effects."( Assessment of the health effects of chemicals in humans: II. Construction of an adverse effects database for QSAR modeling.
Benz, RD; Contrera, JF; Kruhlak, NL; Matthews, EJ; Weaver, JL, 2004
)
0.32
" Adverse events, all of which were mild, occurred in 29."( Pramipexole safely replaces ergot dopamine agonists with either rapid or slow switching.
Abe, T; Hamada, T; Kashihara, K; Kawamura, J; Kowa, H; Nogawa, S; Ogino, Y; Tachibana, H; Takahashi, H,
)
0.13
"The main focus of this study is to determine the optimal administration period concerning toxic effects on ovarian morphological changes in a repeated-dose toxicity study."( Collaborative work on evaluation of ovarian toxicity. 15) Two- or four-week repeated-dose studies and fertility study of bromocriptine in female rats.
Harada, S; Hayasaka, I; Inoue, Y; Ishiguro, T; Jiuxin, Z; Kumazawa, T; Nakajima, A; Nishitani, H; Tagawa, Y; Tanaharu, T, 2009
)
0.56
" Nausea was the most commonly reported adverse event in the bromocriptine-QR group."( Randomized clinical trial of quick-release bromocriptine among patients with type 2 diabetes on overall safety and cardiovascular outcomes.
Cincotta, AH; Ezrokhi, M; Gaziano, JM; Ma, ZJ; O'Connor, CM; Rutty, D; Scranton, RE, 2010
)
0.87
" The safety was assessed on the basis of adverse events, blood pressure, pulse, laboratory measurement and electrocardiographic recordings."( [Efficacy and safety of ropinirole in the treatment of Parkinson's disease: a multi-center, randomized, double-blind and bromocriptine-controlled trial].
Chen, HB; Li, SH; Ma, J; Sun, XR; Tang, RH; Wang, ZF; Yang, JS; Zhang, XY; Zhao, WQ, 2013
)
0.6
" The adverse events occurring at a ratio of over 5% caused by ropinirole included orthostatic hypotension, nausea, dizziness, upper abdominal discomfort, insomnia and palpitation."( [Efficacy and safety of ropinirole in the treatment of Parkinson's disease: a multi-center, randomized, double-blind and bromocriptine-controlled trial].
Chen, HB; Li, SH; Ma, J; Sun, XR; Tang, RH; Wang, ZF; Yang, JS; Zhang, XY; Zhao, WQ, 2013
)
0.6
"Ropinirole is both effective and safe in the treatment of Chinese patients with Parkinson's disease."( [Efficacy and safety of ropinirole in the treatment of Parkinson's disease: a multi-center, randomized, double-blind and bromocriptine-controlled trial].
Chen, HB; Li, SH; Ma, J; Sun, XR; Tang, RH; Wang, ZF; Yang, JS; Zhang, XY; Zhao, WQ, 2013
)
0.6
" The incidence of adverse drug reactions was 35."( Long-term safety and treatment outcomes of pegvisomant in Japanese patients with acromegaly: results from the post-marketing surveillance.
Okayama, A; Sato, T; Shimatsu, A; Yamaguchi, H, 2020
)
0.56
" It appeared to be an effective and safe addition to the pharmacopoeia of drugs for the treatment of a vast variety of diseases as monotherapy or in combination with other drugs."( Bromocriptine therapy: Review of mechanism of action, safety and tolerability.
Abbas, M; Mahmood, Q; Mahmood, Z; Malik, A; Mehmood, MH; Naz, F; Rasool, G; Riaz, M, 2022
)
2.16
" The pooled proportion of adverse effects was 13%, with a 95% confidence interval of 11%-16%."( The efficacy and safety of quinagolide in hyperprolactinemia treatment: A systematic review and meta-analysis.
Huang, Q; Li, M; Tan, J; Zeng, Y; Zhou, W; Zou, Y, 2023
)
0.91

Pharmacokinetics

There were no significant alterations of bromocriptine pharmacokinetic parameters after caffeine, although statistical power was very low. The aim of the study was to evaluate the effects of the combination of octreotide and bromOCriptine compared tooctreotide alone.

ExcerptReferenceRelevance
" There were no significant alterations of bromocriptine pharmacokinetic parameters after caffeine, although statistical power was very low."( Pharmacokinetic evaluation of erythromycin and caffeine administered with bromocriptine.
Berchou, RC; Kareti, D; LeWitt, PA; Nelson, MV, 1990
)
0.77
" Several hypotheses have explained the advantage of the combined treatment by a pharmacodynamic interaction in the striatum."( The influence of levodopa in the pharmacokinetics of bromocriptine in Parkinson's disease.
Bar, M; Graff, E; Isakov, A; Oberman, Z; Rabey, JM; Scharf, M, 1989
)
0.53
" This fast release process was followed by slow clearance with a half-life of 16 days."( Pharmacokinetics of a long-acting bromocriptine preparation (Parlodel LA) and its effect on release of prolactin and growth hormone.
del Pozo, E; Kerp, L; Nüesch, E; Rosenthaler, J; Schlüter, K, 1986
)
0.55
" The pharmacokinetic observations were compared with the time course of drug-induced hypothermia in cold-room acclimatized rats."( Pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of bromocriptine in the rat.
Bhuta, SI; Schran, HF; Tse, FL,
)
0.4
" The preliminary results of pharmacokinetic studies with lisuride suggest several explanations for the differences in daily dosage requirements."( Lisuride treatment in Parkinson's disease: clinical and pharmacokinetic studies.
Burns, RS; Calne, DB; LeWitt, PA, 1983
)
0.27
" The aim of the study was to evaluate the effects of the combination of octreotide and bromocriptine compared to octreotide alone, using a treatment scheme of three daily injections of octreotide during a period long enough to ensure a pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic steady state."( Treatment with octreotide and bromocriptine in patients with acromegaly: an open pharmacodynamic interaction study.
Fredstorp, L; Kutz, K; Werner, S, 1994
)
0.8
" In this study, we performed pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic (PK/PD) analyses of the antiparkinsonian effect of bromocriptine and evaluated drug-induced contralateral rotations in rats in which unilateral striatal lesions had been generated by microinjection of 6-hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA) into the medial forebrain bundle."( Pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic analyses, based on dopamine D2-receptor occupancy of bromocriptine, of bromocriptine-induced contralateral rotations in unilaterally 6-OHDA-lesioned rats.
Atsumi, M; Iga, T; Kawakami, J; Kotaki, H; Sato, H; Sawada, Y; Sugiyama, E; Yamada, Y, 2003
)
0.75
" Using models for disease progression and pharmacodynamic models for drug effects we have characterized the changes in UPDRS over time to determine the influence of the various drug treatments."( Disease progression and pharmacodynamics in Parkinson disease - evidence for functional protection with levodopa and other treatments.
Chan, PL; Holford, NH; Kieburtz, K; Nutt, JG; Shoulson, I, 2006
)
0.33
"This review describes the pharmacologic and pharmacokinetic properties of selected DAs and relates these characteristics to clinical outcomes, with an emphasis on adverse events."( A review of the receptor-binding and pharmacokinetic properties of dopamine agonists.
Burger, E; Härtter, S; Kvernmo, T, 2006
)
0.33
"A simple and rapid RP-HPLC-DAD method was developed and validated for simultaneous determination of the dopamine antagonists haloperidol, its diazepane analog, and the dopamine agonist bromocriptine in rat plasma, to perform pharmacokinetic drug-interaction studies."( Simultaneous RP-HPLC-DAD quantification of bromocriptine, haloperidol and its diazepane structural analog in rat plasma with droperidol as internal standard for application to drug-interaction pharmacokinetics.
Ablordeppey, SY; Billups, J; Jackson, TL; Jones, C; Spencer, SD, 2010
)
0.81
" The biodistribution, pharmacokinetic parameters and dopamine concentration was analysed by ultra-HPLC/mass spectrometry method."( Optimised nanoformulation of bromocriptine for direct nose-to-brain delivery: biodistribution, pharmacokinetic and dopamine estimation by ultra-HPLC/mass spectrometry method.
Ali, J; Baboota, S; Fazil, M; Haque, S; Kumar, M; Md, S; Sahni, JK, 2014
)
0.69

Compound-Compound Interactions

Bromocriptine (Parlodel) was given for 2 years to 17 parkinsonian patients showing inadequate response to treatment over a mean of 7 years with levodopa combined with a decarboxylase inhibitor. Mechanical circulatory support combined with high-dose bromOCriptine therapy to suppress systemic prolactin levels may serve as an effective therapeutic option in patients with fulminant PPCM and cardiogenic shock.

ExcerptReferenceRelevance
"A study was performed to determine if the pharmacokinetics of bromocriptine is altered by factors that have been shown to interact with other ergot compounds."( Pharmacokinetic evaluation of erythromycin and caffeine administered with bromocriptine.
Berchou, RC; Kareti, D; LeWitt, PA; Nelson, MV, 1990
)
0.75
"Bromocriptine (Parlodel) was given for 2 years to 17 parkinsonian patients showing inadequate response to treatment over a mean of 7 years with levodopa combined with a decarboxylase inhibitor."( Bromocriptine combined with levodopa in Parkinson's disease.
Gauthier, G; Martins da Silva, A, 1982
)
3.15
"In order to compare two titrations of Parlodel in early combination with levodopa in the treatment of Parkinson's disease a multicentre randomized open study was performed with a fast titration in group A (15 mg/day for 3 weeks) and slow in group B (15 mg/day for 5 weeks)."( [Parlodel in early combination with levodopa in the treatment of Parkinson disease. Comparison of 2 dosage forms].
Bourdeix, I; Chaumet-Riffaud, PD; Goulley, F; Wolmark, Y,
)
0.13
"To compare effectiveness of levodopa and levodopa combined with selegiline in treating early, mild Parkinson's disease."( Comparison of therapeutic effects and mortality data of levodopa and levodopa combined with selegiline in patients with early, mild Parkinson's disease. Parkinson's Disease Research Group of the United Kingdom.
Lees, AJ, 1995
)
0.29
"Treatment with levodopa and dopa decarboxylase inhibitor (arm 1) or levodopa and decarboxylase inhibitor in combination with selegiline (arm 2)."( Comparison of therapeutic effects and mortality data of levodopa and levodopa combined with selegiline in patients with early, mild Parkinson's disease. Parkinson's Disease Research Group of the United Kingdom.
Lees, AJ, 1995
)
0.29
"Levodopa in combination with selegiline seemed to confer no clinical benefit over levodopa alone in treating early, mild Parkinson's disease."( Comparison of therapeutic effects and mortality data of levodopa and levodopa combined with selegiline in patients with early, mild Parkinson's disease. Parkinson's Disease Research Group of the United Kingdom.
Lees, AJ, 1995
)
0.29
"Dopamine agonists have been recommended as early treatment for Parkinson's disease (PD), alone or combined with levodopa."( The Parkinson-Control study: a 1-year randomized, double-blind trial comparing piribedil (150 mg/day) with bromocriptine (25 mg/day) in early combination with levodopa in Parkinson's disease.
Aguilar, M; Castro-Caldas, A; Cesaro, P; Del Signore, S; Delwaide, P; Jost, W; Lamberti, P; Merello, M; Williams, A, 2006
)
0.55
"The aim of this work was to investigate the effect on antioxidant potential of some commonly used drugs (morphine, tramadol, bromocriptine, haloperidol and azithromycin) on immobilization stress (IS) combined with cold restraint stress (CRS) in the rat."( Antioxidant effects of some drugs on immobilization stress combined with cold restraint stress.
Janicijevic-Hudomal, S; Kaurinovic, B; Popovic, M; Rasic, J; Trivic, S; Vojnović, M, 2009
)
0.56
"To investigate the effect of Compound Xuanju Capsule (CXC) combined with bromocriptine on hyperprolactinemia-induced erectile dysfunction (ED)."( [Efficacy of compound xuanju capsule combined with bromocriptine on hyperprolactinemia-induced erectile dysfunction].
Bian, J; Deng, CH; Huang, YP; Liu, CD; Sun, XZ; Ye, YL, 2012
)
0.86
"To observe the therapeutic effect of Qilin Pills combined with bromocriptine on idiopathic hyperprolactinemic (HPRL) oligoasthenospermia."( [Qilin pills combined with bromocriptine for idiopathic hyperprolactinemic oligoasthenozoospermia].
Deng, YS; Gan, QS; Li, XY; Su, FY; Wu, XN; Wu, YF; Zhou, JF, 2013
)
0.93
"We conducted a randomized controlled study on 40 cases of idiopathic HPRL oligoasthenospermia, who were equally assigned to a trial group and a control group to be treated with Qilin Pills (6 g tid) combined with bromocriptine and bromocriptine alone, respectively, both for a course of 12 weeks."( [Qilin pills combined with bromocriptine for idiopathic hyperprolactinemic oligoasthenozoospermia].
Deng, YS; Gan, QS; Li, XY; Su, FY; Wu, XN; Wu, YF; Zhou, JF, 2013
)
0.87
"Qilin Pills combined with bromocriptine have a significantly better efficacy than bromocriptine alone in the treatment of idiopathic HPRL oligoasthenospermia."( [Qilin pills combined with bromocriptine for idiopathic hyperprolactinemic oligoasthenozoospermia].
Deng, YS; Gan, QS; Li, XY; Su, FY; Wu, XN; Wu, YF; Zhou, JF, 2013
)
0.99
" We show for the first time that mechanical circulatory support combined with high-dose bromocriptine therapy to suppress systemic prolactin levels may serve as an effective therapeutic option in patients with fulminant PPCM and cardiogenic shock."( Complete recovery of fulminant peripartum cardiomyopathy on mechanical circulatory support combined with high-dose bromocriptine therapy.
Akhyari, P; Hilfiker-Kleiner, D; Horn, P; Kelm, M; Saeed, D; Westenfeld, R, 2017
)
0.89

Bioavailability

Liposomes efficiently encapsulate curcumin and bromocriptine (BR) in a polymer structure. This results in enhanced aqueous solubility of the mentioned hydrophobic agents and higher bioavailability of the drugs. The effects of caffeine require further study.

ExcerptReferenceRelevance
" Bioavailability of the drug was not significantly reduced by food nor by metoclopramide pre-treatment."( The effect of food and metoclopramide on the pharmacokinetics and side effects of bromocriptine.
Francetić, I; Kopitar, Z; Plavsić, F; Povsic, L; Urbancic, J; Vrhovac, B,
)
0.36
"Since pH profiles of the dissolution rate are thought to be predictive for the in vivo performance of oral modified-release formulations with respect to bioavailability and dose dumping with food, these pH profiles were established for a new modified-release (MR) formulation for bromocriptine (Parlodel SRO)."( Relevance of pH dependency on in vitro release of bromocriptine from a modified-release formulation.
Beglinger, C; Drewe, J; Guitard, P; Johnston, B; Keck, M; Pellet, A, 1991
)
0.71
" We conclude that erythromycin can markedly increase the systemic bioavailability of bromocriptine, which can lead to increased therapeutic or adverse effects, whereas the effects of caffeine require further study."( Pharmacokinetic evaluation of erythromycin and caffeine administered with bromocriptine.
Berchou, RC; Kareti, D; LeWitt, PA; Nelson, MV, 1990
)
0.73
" The relative bioavailability of the 5 mg modified release capsule was 84."( Differential effect of food on kinetics of bromocriptine in a modified release capsule and a conventional formulation.
Abisch, E; Drewe, J; Keck, M; Krummen, K; Mazer, N, 1988
)
0.54
" The results indicated that oral doses of bromocriptine were rapidly, though incompletely (32-40 per cent), absorbed, but underwent extensive first-pass metabolism, resulting in an absolute bioavailability of only 6 per cent."( Pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of bromocriptine in the rat.
Bhuta, SI; Schran, HF; Tse, FL,
)
0.66
"P-glycoprotein (P-gp) is an efflux transporter involved in limiting the oral bioavailability and tissue penetration of a variety of structurally divergent molecules."( Three-dimensional quantitative structure-activity relationships of inhibitors of P-glycoprotein.
Dantzig, AH; Ekins, S; Kim, RB; Lan, LB; Leake, BF; Schuetz, EG; Schuetz, JD; Shepard, RL; Wikel, JH; Winter, MA; Wrighton, SA; Yasuda, K, 2002
)
0.31
" But current BRC formulations have some side effects and bioavailability problems because of hepatic first pass effect."( Transdermal administration of bromocriptine.
Acartürk, F; Degim, IT; Demirez Lortlar, N; Erdogan, D, 2003
)
0.61
" Human oral bioavailability is an important pharmacokinetic property, which is directly related to the amount of drug available in the systemic circulation to exert pharmacological and therapeutic effects."( Hologram QSAR model for the prediction of human oral bioavailability.
Andricopulo, AD; Moda, TL; Montanari, CA, 2007
)
0.34
"Both low solubility and high hepatic metabolism cause low oral bioavailability of bromocriptine mesylate (BM) leading to very low drug amount in brain."( Bromocriptine tablet of self-microemulsifying system adsorbed onto porous carrier to stimulate lipoproteins secretion for brain cellular uptake.
Lipipun, V; Phaechamud, T; Ritthidej, GC; Thongrangsalit, S, 2015
)
2.09
" The embryo absorption rate was counted."( Therapeutic effects of Wharton jelly-derived mesenchymal stem cells on rat abortion models.
Chen, W; Chen, X; Qian, X; Wu, R; Xie, H; Yang, X; Zhang, Y, 2016
)
0.43
"Cell membrane permeability is an important determinant for oral absorption and bioavailability of a drug molecule."( Highly predictive and interpretable models for PAMPA permeability.
Jadhav, A; Kerns, E; Nguyen, K; Shah, P; Sun, H; Xu, X; Yan, Z; Yu, KR, 2017
)
0.46
" Liposomes efficiently encapsulate curcumin and bromocriptine (BR) in a polymer structure, which results in enhanced aqueous solubility of the mentioned hydrophobic agents and higher bioavailability of the drugs."( Co-Administration of Curcumin and Bromocriptine Nano-liposomes for Induction of Apoptosis in Lung Cancer Cells
Asadi, H; Mansoori, A; Movafagh, A; Sadeghizadeh, M; Shahraeini, SS; Sheikhpour, M; Yazdian, F, 2020
)
1.09
"The ATP-binding cassette transporter P-glycoprotein (P-gp) is known to limit both brain penetration and oral bioavailability of many chemotherapy drugs."( A High-Throughput Screen of a Library of Therapeutics Identifies Cytotoxic Substrates of P-glycoprotein.
Ambudkar, SV; Brimacombe, KR; Chen, L; Gottesman, MM; Guha, R; Hall, MD; Klumpp-Thomas, C; Lee, OW; Lee, TD; Lusvarghi, S; Robey, RW; Shen, M; Tebase, BG, 2019
)
0.51

Dosage Studied

Bromocriptine in a dosage of 2-5 mg twice daily caused a rapid fall in plasma prolactin. Early abortion rat model was established by Bromocriptne at 6-8 gestation day.

ExcerptRelevanceReference
" In 14 patients who showed no response whatever, further treatment, with bromocriptine in doses raised gradually to a final daily dosage of 15 mg, was effective in four cases, though the improvement was generally only moderate."( Therapy of extrapyramidal side effects, with particular reference to persistent dyskinesia and lithium tremor.
Pöldinger, W, 1978
)
0.49
"2-bromo-alpha-ergocryptine (bromocriptine) in a dosage of 2-5 mg twice daily caused a rapid fall in plasma prolactin."( Controlled trial of bromocriptine, quinoestrol, and placebo in suppression of puerperal lactation.
Davis, RH; Griffiths, K; Groom, G; Hibbard, BM; Walker, S, 1975
)
0.87
" These usually disappeared with the dosage was reduced, but 5 patients refused to continue."( Bromocriptine treatment of secondary amenorrhoea.
Hirvonen, E; Ranta, T; Seppalå, M, 1976
)
1.7
" The main problems were psychiatric disturbance (8 patients) and erythromelalgia (7 patients); these effects tended to occur late (mean 6 months and 10 months, respectively) and with high dosage (mean 66 mg and 115 mg daily)."( Long-term treatment of parkinsonism with bromocriptine.
Calne, DB; Neophytides, A; Nutt, JG; Plotkin, C; Teychenne, PF; Williams, AC, 1978
)
0.52
" Moreover, a dose-response relationship was obtained between the TRH concentrations infused and the magnitude of GH and PRL responses."( Effect of thyrotropin-releasing hormone and bromoergocriptine on growth hormone and prolactin secretion in perfused pituitary adenoma tissues of acromegaly.
Ishibashi, M; Yamaji, T, 1978
)
0.26
" Bromocriptine at low dosage seems to act as a partial dopamine antagonist, with phenothiazine-like effects, and at higher doses it acts as a direct dopamine-receptor stimulating agent."( Bromocriptine and dopaminergic function in Huntington disease.
Albano, C; Besio, G; Loeb, C; Roccatagliata, G, 1979
)
2.61
" The conclusions can be summarized as follows: prolactin (1) has a direct stimulatory effect on the number of LH receptors on rat Leydig cells, (2) has no effect on the characteristics of the dose-response curve of isolated Leydig cells (hCG stimulated androgen production) in vitro even after treatment with pharmacological doses in vivo, and (3) acts synergistically with LH to stimulate the quantity of androgen produced by the Leydig cells in response to hCG in vitro and to increase the sensitivity of the hCG-dose-response curve."( Prolactin and Leydig cell responsiveness to LH/hCG in the rat.
Clausen, OP; Hansson, V; Haug, E; Olsen, A; Purvis, K, 1979
)
0.26
"25 mg/day, then gradually increased to 20 mg daily, which dosage was continued for 3--9 weeks."( Effect of the dopamine agonist bromocriptine on blood pressure, catecholamines and renin activity in acromegalics at rest, following exercise and during insulin induced hypoglycemia.
Hökfelt, B; Nilsson, A, 1978
)
0.54
"Twelve acromegalic patients with clinical and biochemical evidence of active disease were studied whilst on bromocryptine (Sandoz) at a maximum dosage of 10--60 mg."( Treatment of acromegaly with bromocryptine.
Steinbeck, K; Turtle, JR, 1979
)
0.26
" The usually effective dosage was 5 mg per day."( [Dynamics of hormonal modifications induced by bromocryptin during hyperprolactinemia].
Bricaire, H; Strauch, G, 1977
)
0.26
" The dosage of bromocriptine was 2-5 mg twice daily."( Effect of bromocriptine on the premenstrual syndrome. A double-blind clinical trial.
Andersen, AN; Larsen, JF; Nielsen, J; Steenstrup, OR; Svendstrup, B, 1977
)
1.01
"Eight selected patients with active acromegaly and elevated GH levels without other endocrine disturbances were submitted to long-term treatment and acute dose-response trials with bromocriptine."( Bromocriptine treatment in acromegaly: clinical and biochemical effects.
Bohmer, T; Halse, J; Haugen, HN, 1977
)
1.89
"5 mg of bromocriptine were found to have no predictive value as to the dosage needed for treatment, whereas the plasma gonadotropin response after the administration of luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone appeared to be predictive with respect to the return of ovulation during bromocriptine therapy."( Value of luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone testing in bromocriptine treatment of amenorrhea and hyperprolactinemia in patients with pituitary tumors.
Birkenhäger, JC; De Jong, FH; Docter, R; Kwa, HG; Lamberts, SW, 1978
)
0.94
" Peak levels occurred 30--210 min after dosage (mean 102 min)."( Plasma bromocriptine levels, clinical and growth hormone responses in Parkinsonism.
Debono, A; Marsden, CD; Parkes, JD; Price, P; Rosenthaler, J, 1978
)
0.71
" Methyl testosterone, in the dosage used in this study, was quite ineffective in suppressing lactation or breast symptoms."( Bromocriptine, methyl testosterone and placebo for inhibition of physiological lactation: a controlled study.
Andrews, E; Biggs, JS; Hacker, N; Munro, C, 1978
)
1.7
" The reduction of blood sugar values depends on the dosage of bromocriptine."( [Changes in carbohydrate tolerance in the puerperium by inhibition of lactation with bromocriptine and quinestrol (author's transl)].
Peters, FD; Roemer, VM, 1977
)
0.72
" The reduction of blood sugar levels was found to depend on the dosage of bromocriptine."( [Changes in carbohydrate tolerance in the puerperium by inhibition of lactation with bromocriptine and quinestrol (author's transl)].
Peters, FD; Roemer, VM, 1977
)
0.71
" The 5 mg daily dosage often did not produce the desired hormonal and clinical response."( Clinical and hormonal response of patients with galactorrhea syndrome treated with bromergocryptine.
Kamran, T; Riazi, T; Salimi, MR; Sarram, M; Wenn, RV, 1977
)
0.26
" Used in modest dosage (up to 15 mg/day) bromoergocryptine can lower plasma and urinary growth hormone and plasma somatomedin concentrations in acromegalic patients in whom previous treatments had decreased but not cured hormone overproduction."( Bromoergocryptin treatment of acromegaly persisting following conventional therapy.
Frengley, PA; Holdaway, IM; Ibbertson, HK; Scott, DJ, 1978
)
0.26
" At both low (50 mg daily) and high (150 mg daily) dosage there was a similar but not identical profile of response."( Comparison between lergotrile and bromocriptine in parkinsonism.
Bern, SM; Calne, DB; McInturff, D; Pfeiffer, RF; Teychenne, PF, 1978
)
0.54
" The drug was administered subcutaneously at a dosage of 100 microgram per 100 g body weight three times per day."( Lack of effect of bromocriptine on serum levels of calcium in the rat.
Tan, CM; Tan, GJ,
)
0.47
"The radioimmunological dosage of human prolactin using the hormone as tracer and reference and an anti-prolactin antiserum is described."( [Radioimmunoassay of human prolactin].
Franchimont, P; Gevaert, Y; Kennes, F; Reuter, AM, 1975
)
0.25
" Both drugs inhibited the nursing-induced rise in serum PRL in lactating mice, CB-154 being effective at a somewhat lower dosage than lergotrile mesylate."( A comparison of the effects of CB-154 and lergotrile mesylate on prolactin and growth hormone secretion in mice.
Salocks, CB; Sinha, YN; VanderLaan, WP, 1976
)
0.26
" On gradually increasing dosage bromocriptine was tolerated without side effects."( [Therapy of acromegaly using bromocriptine].
Dirks, H; Köbberling, J; Schwinn, G, 1975
)
0.83
" The dosage was 1 mg."( Lack of action of prolactin suppression on the regulation of the human menstrual cycle.
Brun del Re, R; del Pozo, E; Eppenberger, U; Friesen, H; Goldstein, M, 1975
)
0.25
" Verapamil, given for 1 week at a dosage of 240 mg orally to eight healthy volunteers, induced a significant elevation of basal PRL levels (17."( Effects of calcium channel blockade with verapamil on the prolactin responses to TRH, L-dopa, and bromocriptine.
Kamal, TJ; Molitch, ME, 1992
)
0.5
" The results of the substitution phase show that combined treatment permitted a mean reduction of the levodopa dosage by 40%, without deterioration of therapeutic response."( Primary combination therapy of early Parkinson's disease. A long-term comparison between the combined regimen bromocriptine/levodopa and levodopa monotherapy--first interim report.
Kraus, PH; Letzel, H; Przuntek, H; Schwarzmann, D; Welzel, D, 1992
)
0.5
" On the other hand MR demonstrated a focal abnormality in only 30% of cases when the patients had been on dopamine agonist therapy: the MRI findings in the group of bromocriptine treated patients are not affected by neither the duration and dosage of the therapy or the delay between MR examination and the bromocriptine therapy discontinuation."( [Evaluation of nuclear magnetic resonance imaging in tridimensional acquisition in the investigation of prolactin microadenoma].
Brue, T; Chabert-Orsini, V; Cortesi, L; Girard, N; Jaquet, P; Maman, P; Raybaud, C, 1992
)
0.48
"From July 1981 to September 1988, 106 infertile patients with hyperprolactinemia treated with bromocriptine were reviewed retrospectively with special attention to the dosage of bromocriptine and the evaluation of infertility before treatment 84 patients (79."( [Experiences with bromocriptine treatment of female infertility due to hyperprolactinemia].
Lin, SQ, 1992
)
0.84
" Patients were rated with the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale prior to the first bromocriptine dose, at 24 hours after dosage initiation, and at weekly intervals."( Bromocriptine in augmentation of antipsychotic response in chronic schizophrenia: a negative pilot report.
Abi-Darghum, A; Chu, CC; Saini, TS; Wells, BG, 1991
)
1.95
" Discontinuation of the bromocriptine and increase in antipsychotic dosage resulted in complete remission."( Psychotic exacerbation attributed to low-dose bromocriptine treatment of galactorrhea and hyperprolactinemia.
Aronzon, R; Dorevitch, A; Stark, M, 1991
)
0.85
" It has been used for a few years in the treatment of benign breast diseases at a dosage of 200-800 mg daily."( [Danazol in treatment of cystic mastopathy].
Radivojevic, K, 1991
)
0.28
" In the EPP, dosing with BEC during Days 1-8 of pregnancy reduced the number of implantation sites found on Day 9 as well as serum progesterone."( Use of bromoergocryptine in the validation of protocols for the assessment of mechanisms of early pregnancy loss in the rat.
Cummings, AM; Harris, ST; Perreault, SD, 1991
)
0.28
"From July 1981 to September 1988, 106 infertile patients with hyperprolactinemia treated with bromocriptine were reviewed retrospectively with special attention to the dosage of bromocriptine and the evaluation of infertility before treatment."( Experience with bromocriptine for the treatment of female infertility due to hyperprolactinemia.
Ge, QS; Gu, CX; Lin, SQ; Wang, HL; Xu, L, 1991
)
0.85
" On the paraclinical level: angiography reveals voluminous ICEP in the sella region with sub-sellar expansion; dosage with prolactinemia was only possible in 2 cases (of which 1 was post operational), which underlines the difficulties of carrying out this examination and its high cost despite its obvious usefulness in diagnosis and therapeutic supervision."( [Prolactin adenomas in Dakar].
Diop, AG; Gueye, M; Kabre, A; Mauferon, JB; Ndiaye, IP; Ndiaye, MM, 1990
)
0.28
" There was no significant advantage in using the higher of the two dosage regimens, and we would recommend a maintenance dosage range of 5 mg-15 mg bromocriptine daily."( Bromocriptine as initial therapy in elderly parkinsonian patients. The Bromocriptine Multicentre Trial Group.
, 1990
)
1.92
" Increased effectiveness in these patients was not associated with increased dosage beyond 25-30 mg daily."( Adjunctive therapy with bromocriptine in Parkinson's disease.
Becker, AL; Bilchik, TR; Blumenfeld, A; Fourie, PB; Fritz, VU; Ming, A; Reef, HE; Saling, M; Temlett, JA, 1990
)
0.59
" Several dilutions of plasma and pituitary homogenate of newts yielded dose-response curves which were parallel to the standard curve."( Development and application of homologous radioimmunoassay for newt prolactin.
Kikuyama, S; Matsuda, K; Yamamoto, K, 1990
)
0.28
" Administration of bromocriptine alone at either dosage had no influence on gastric carcinogenesis."( Attenuating effect of bromocriptine on cysteamine anticarcinogenesis of stomach cancers induced by N-methyl-N'-nitro-N-nitrosoguanidine.
Baba, M; Ichii, M; Iishi, H; Nakaizumi, A; Taniguchi, H; Tatsuta, M; Uehara, H, 1990
)
0.92
" This combination resulted in an elevated cyclosporin A plasma level, and the dosage was reduced by 30-50% (plasma level 70-120 ng/ml)."( [Bromocriptine: a new therapy concept in the treatment of chronic recurrent uveitis?].
Pleyer, U; Thiel, HJ; Waetjen, R; Weidle, EG; Zierhut, M, 1989
)
1.19
"One hundred and thirty four patients with previously untreated Parkinson's disease were recruited to a multicentre double blind study comparing two introductory dosage regimens of bromocriptine: a low/slow regimen increasing to a maximum of 25 mg/day and a high/fast regimen increasing to a maximum of 100 mg/day over a 26 week period."( Bromocriptine in Parkinson's disease: a double-blind study comparing "low-slow" and "high-fast" introductory dosage regimens in de novo patients. UK Bromocriptine Research Group.
, 1989
)
1.91
" 3 Propranolol, but not domperidone, shifted to the right the dose-response curve for the positive inotropic and chronotropic effects of dopamine."( The lack of the effect of DA-1 and DA-2 dopamine agonists on the isolated guinea-pig atria.
Martinez-Mir, I; Morales-Olivas, FJ; Rubio, E, 1987
)
0.27
" The authors suggest that weekly plasma prolactin levels may provide a readily obtainable, early indicator of proper dosage and thus minimize the chance of iatrogenic illness."( Serial plasma prolactin levels in neuroleptic-induced galactorrhea: a case report.
Asnis, G; Gioia, P, 1988
)
0.27
" Time-course and dose-response studies further demonstrated that acetyltransferase activity covaried with POMC mRNA and peptide levels."( Coordinate regulation of peptide acetyltransferase activity and proopiomelanocortin gene expression in the intermediate lobe of the rat pituitary.
Chappell, MC; Millington, WR; Mueller, GP; O'Donohue, TL; Roberts, JL, 1986
)
0.27
" In addition, the dose-response curve after 5-15 mg/kg bromocriptine administration was parallel to that of apomorphine."( Evidence that the stimulus properties of apomorphine are mediated by both D1 and D2 receptor activation.
Greer, NL; Schechter, MD, 1987
)
0.52
" Dose-response studies done in the presence of Na+ show the existence of a good correlation between hormone and nucleotide effects of dopaminergic agonists while, in the absence of Na+, a dissociation is observed between the inhibition of PRL release, which is completely suppressed, and that of cyclic AMP accumulation which is slightly or not at all decreased."( Inhibition of prolactin release and blockade of adenohypophyseal cell cyclic AMP accumulation are two dissociable effects of dopaminergic and non-dopaminergic drugs.
Collu, R; Ducharme, JR; Lafond, J, 1986
)
0.27
" Acute administration of an additional 10 IU ACTH to hypophysectomized rats on maintenance dosage of ACTH resulted in decreased SAM-DC activity in both adrenal medulla and cortex."( Decreased activity of adrenal S-adenosylmethionine decarboxylase in rats subjected to dopamine agonists, metabolic stress, or bodily immobilization.
Ekker, M; Sourkes, TL, 1987
)
0.27
"Seven patients with vascular dementia completed an 8-month randomized double-blind crossover trial of bromocriptine in a dosage of up to 30 mg per day."( A crossover trial of bromocriptine in the treatment of vascular dementia.
Andrew, ME; Malloy, PF; Nadeau, SE, 1988
)
0.81
" Continuous intravenous infusions of rPRL increased DOPA accumulation in the median eminence after 2 h; this effect exhibited a very steep dose-response relationship (possibly an 'all-or-none' response)."( The rapid 'tonic' and the delayed 'induction' components of the prolactin-induced activation of tuberoinfundibular dopaminergic neurons following the systemic administration of prolactin.
Demarest, KT; Moore, KE; Riegle, GD, 1986
)
0.27
" In 11 patients with macroadenoma bromocriptine dosage and prolactinaemia were inversely correlated; in 8 of these the adenoma was reduced in size."( [Medical treatment of prolactin-secreting pituitary adenomas. Influence of the size of the adenoma].
Courtois, H; Gancel, A; Kuhn, JM; Schrub, JC; Tadie, M; Weinstein, A; Wolf, LM, 1985
)
0.55
" The patients developed symptoms from nine months to four years after starting treatment with bromocriptine that varied in dosage from 22 to 50 mg daily, while the patient receiving mesulergine was taking 6 mg daily."( Pleuropulmonary disease during bromocriptine treatment of Parkinson's disease.
Churg, A; Fleetham, JA; McElvaney, NG; Wilcox, PG, 1988
)
0.78
" A diuretic and/or a beta-blocker were administered concomitantly in constant dosage to 11 of the 20 patients who received bromocriptine."( Bromocriptine in the treatment of hypertension.
Bhattacharjee, P; Graham, B; Hernandez, J; Prichard, BN; Walden, RJ, 1986
)
1.92
" By this treatment, plasma prolactin levels were reduced by 83 and 87%, and normalization was achieved in 13 patients in the lisuride group (average dosage 1 mg/d) and in 15 patients in the bromocriptine group (average dosage 10 mg/d)."( Dopamine agonists in the treatment of hyperprolactinemia. Comparison between bromocriptine and lisuride.
Heinlein, W; Horowski, R; Schatz, H; Stracke, H, 1986
)
0.69
" The possibilities of LC-MS in the pharmaceutical industry for the analysis of drug substances and dosage forms, metabolism studies and the elucidation of the structures of materials of biological origin are discussed."( Experience with routine applications of liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry in the pharmaceutical industry.
Erni, F; Groeppelin, A; Linder, M; Schellenberg, KH, 1987
)
0.27
"Six patients with hyperprolactinemia, visual impairment and large macroprolactinoma were treated with a long-acting bromocriptine, in dosage of 50 mg as a single im injection."( Long-acting bromocriptine for the acute treatment of large macroprolactinomas.
Fonseca, ME; Loyo, M; Medina, M; Miranda, R; Moran, C; Zarate, A, 1987
)
0.86
"" After the addition of bromocriptine any reductions in levodopa dosage were small, with repeated cuts made gradually over months preventing the deterioration commonly seen with larger sudden reductions in levodopa dosage."( Bromocriptine: long-term low-dose therapy in Parkinson's disease.
Bergsrud, D; Elton, RL; Racy, A; Teychenne, PF, 1986
)
2.02
" In the sixth year, it appeared necessary to increase the dosage in the first three groups."( Low-dosage treatment in de novo patients with Parkinson's disease: a prospective study.
van der Drift, JH, 1987
)
0.27
" Dose-response studies revealed that the sensitivity and magnitude of response to ICV prolactin was markedly reduced in 12-day hypophysectomized rats."( Hypoprolactinemia induced by hypophysectomy and long-term bromocriptine treatment decreases tuberoinfundibular dopaminergic neuronal activity and the responsiveness of these neurons to prolactin.
Demarest, KT; Moore, KE; Riegle, GD, 1985
)
0.51
" A 37% improvement of the mean neurologic deficit score was obtained at the maximal daily dosage of 20 mg."( Low dosages of bromocriptine added to levodopa in Parkinson's disease.
Elton, RL; Hoehn, MM, 1985
)
0.62
" Levodopa combined with a peripheral decarboxylase inhibitor is the treatment of choice thereafter, and with the appearance of fluctuations it is necessary to increase the frequency of dosage of levodopa and to consider adding bromocriptine."( The treatment of Parkinson's disease.
Morris, JG, 1985
)
0.45
" A marked clinical and laboratory improvement was noted in two patients, in another some clinical and laboratory improvement was obtained only after bromocriptine dosage was increased to 15 mg/day."( Cushing's disease: clinical and laboratory response to bromocriptine therapy.
Antunes, RC; de Pinho, MO; Francalanci, CC; Franco, S; Lima, MB, 1984
)
0.71
"Dopamine agonist therapy using selected drugs at particular dosage levels has been found to have therapeutic benefit in certain dyskinetic syndromes."( Bromocriptine and CF 25-397 in the treatment of tardive dyskinesia.
Chase, TN; Tamminga, CA, 1980
)
1.7
"Sixty patients suffering from psoriasis of all clinical forms have been treated with an increased dosage of Bromocriptin."( Treatment of psoriasis with bromocriptin.
Frey, H; Galle, K; Geiger, A; Neidhardt, M; Weber, G, 1981
)
0.26
"The effects of bromocriptine on dose-response curves to intravenously administered sympathomimetic agents (adrenaline, noradrenaline, phenylephrine and clonidine) were studied in normotensive anesthetized dogs."( Alpha-adrenolytic properties of bromocriptine in dogs.
Montastruc, JL; Montastruc, P, 1982
)
0.9
"4 X 10(-10) M produced a consistent and reproducible dose-response curve for TSH (n = 14) which was not significantly altered by the presence of dopamine (n = 5)."( Dopaminergic control of the rat thyrotroph.
Besser, GM; Grossman, A; Price, J; Rees, LH, 1983
)
0.27
" Seven DA agonists produced U-shaped dose-response curves indicative of activity at both the autoreceptor and postsynaptic DA receptor."( Mouse locomotor activity: an in vivo test for dopamine autoreceptor activation.
Bendesky, RJ; Martin, GE, 1984
)
0.27
" The effects of CU 32-085 and bromocriptine on dose-response curves to sympathomimetic agents (adrenaline, noradrenaline, methoxamine and clonidine), intravenously administered, were also studied."( Hypotensive action and alpha-adrenolytic properties of a new dopaminergic agonist, CU 32-085, in the rat.
Esplugues, J; Morales-Olivas, FJ; Palop, V; Rubio, E, 1984
)
0.56
" The dose-response curve for dopamine-induced relaxation was shifted to the right by the dopamine receptor antagonist d-butaclamol (10(-7)--3 X 10(-6) M) in a concentration-dependent manner."( Stereospecific antagonism by d-butaclamol of dopamine-induced relaxation of the isolated rabbit mesenteric artery.
Brodde, OE; Freistühler, J; Meyer, FJ,
)
0.13
" Dosing without timing may lead to reduced effect or lack of effect, ambiguity and controversy, and lack of timing may account for the circumstance that an effect of bromocriptine upon TSH in human serum was not previously established."( Circadian aspects of serum prolactin and TSH lowering by bromocriptine in patients with prostatic hypertrophy.
Benvenuti, M; Cagnoni, M; Halberg, F; Seal, US; Tarquini, B, 1981
)
0.7
" There is a tendency towards an increased response-rate with increased dosage of progestin, in both endometrial and breast carcinoma, while the route of administration appears to be of minor importance."( Progestin therapy of endometrial, breast and ovarian carcinoma. A review of clinical observations.
Kauppila, A, 1984
)
0.27
" A well correlated log dose-response relationship was demonstrated between 12."( Effect of prolactin and prostaglandins on the stimulation of prolactin binding sites in the male rat liver.
Amit, T; Barkey, RJ; Lahav, M; Shani, J; Youdim, MB, 1981
)
0.26
" (2) Normalised alpha-MSH dose-response curves for aldosterone production in glomerulosa cells from normal rats, and corticosterone in inner zone cells were coincident."( alpha-MSH and zona glomerulosa function in the rat.
Bateman, A; Dell, A; McAuley, ME; Vinson, GP; Whitehouse, BJ, 1983
)
0.27
" The results, based on changes in steroid dosage and other medication, daily symptom scores and PEF values, suggest that bromocriptine has little effect in asthma."( Bromocriptine in severe adult asthma--a negative report.
Brennan, NJ; Carmichael, J; Crompton, GK; Darbyshire, J; Grant, IW; Hanley, SP; Nunn, AJ; Stokes, TC; Turner-Warwick, M, 1983
)
1.92
" The preliminary results of pharmacokinetic studies with lisuride suggest several explanations for the differences in daily dosage requirements."( Lisuride treatment in Parkinson's disease: clinical and pharmacokinetic studies.
Burns, RS; Calne, DB; LeWitt, PA, 1983
)
0.27
" Bromocriptine appears to be the treatment of choice in premenstrual mastodynia if the dosage of bromocriptine is at least 5 mg daily."( Bromocriptine and premenstrual symptoms: a survey of double blind trials.
Andersch, B, 1983
)
2.62
" Subsequently they were treated with either a mean dosage of 444 mg levodopa and benserazide (47 patients) or a combination of a mean of 298 mg levodopa and benserazide plus 17 mg bromocriptine (32 patients)."( [Combined treatment of the early stages of Parkinson's syndrome with bromocriptine and levodopa. The results of a multicenter study].
Fischer, PA; Majer, M; Przuntek, H; Welzel, D, 1984
)
0.69
" The dosage of bromocriptine was modified to reduce the serum prolactin level to below 20 ng/ml."( Continuous administration of bromocriptine in the prevention of neurological complications in pregnant women with prolactinomas.
Konopka, P; Merceron, RE; Raymond, JP; Seneze, J, 1983
)
0.91
" A similar dose-response study in mature male mice suggested that relatively higher doses of CB-154 are required to suppress plasma levels of Prl in this species, although large doses of CB-154 can still increase plasma levels of gonadotrophins and T in male mice."( Effect of treatment with different doses of bromocriptine on plasma profiles of prolactin, gonadotrophins and testosterone in mature male rats and mice.
Bartke, A; Collins, TJ; Parkening, TA; Rao, MR, 1984
)
0.53
" Reducing the dosage prevents dyskinesia."( [Toxic drug effects of antiparkinson therapy and their preventability].
Danielczyk, W,
)
0.13
" In addition to evaluating the PRL secretory pattern and lactotroph response, the PCOS individuals were given dopamine agonist therapy in a graduated dosage schedule, increasing each month, over a 3-month interval."( The value of prolactin dynamics as a predictor of ovulation with bromocriptine in patients with polycystic ovary syndrome.
Buckman, MT; Mattox, JH; Peake, GT, 1984
)
0.51
" Audiometrically, the hearing improved in all three patients when the bromocriptine dosage was reduced, thus suggesting that this drug may produce a reversible ototoxicity."( Bromocriptine-associated ototoxicity.
Ballantyne, J; Lanthier, PL; Morgan, MY, 1984
)
1.94
" Because of the high rate of side effects and a significant incidence of "rebound," the dosage of bromocriptine should probably be changed, and we recommend a revised dosage."( Efficacy of bromocriptine versus breast binders as inhibitors of postpartum lactation.
Shapiro, AG; Thomas, L, 1984
)
0.86
" The peripheral serum levels of prolactin, FSH, LH, LPE, and progesterone were determined once a week and if the prolactin levels remained high, the bromocriptine dosage was increased."( Hyperprolactinemia in cases of infertility and amenorrhea.
Carlström, K; Furuhjelm, M; Rydner, T, 1980
)
0.46
" Antibodies against rat PRI, however, showed no effect on either early pregnancy or lactation, although the sera of the treated rats contained free PRL antibodies as evidence for sufficient dosage of antiserum."( In vivo studies on prolactin function in the female rat: divergent effects of treatment with bromergocryptine and antisera to rat prolactin.
Berger, P; Kofler, R; Tabarelli, M; Wick, G, 1981
)
0.26
" Bromocriptin dosage was gradually increased to a total dose of 30 - 40 mg daily."( [Bromocriptin in the treatment of progressive stages of Parkinson's disease (author's transl)].
Fischer, PA; Schneider, E, 1982
)
0.26
" The hormonal dosage highlighted a clear increase in Gonadotropins and Estradiol levels."( Bromocryptin and epimestrol in MAP-negative secondary amenorrheas.
Polatti, F, 1981
)
0.26
" It is concluded that agonist induction of subsensitivity in the DA system is difficult to reproduce and may depend on highly specific dosage conditions and treatment schedules."( The effect of chronic bromocriptine and L-dopa on spiperone binding and apomorphine-induced stereotypy.
Bannet, J; Belmaker, RH; Globus, M; Lerer, B, 1982
)
0.58
" The dosage of bromocriptine was 3 mg/day for 12 weeks or until the 2nd vaginal bleeding."( Failure of bromocriptine to restore the menstrual cycle in normoprolactinemic post-pill amenorrhea.
Coelingh Bennink, HJ; van der Steeg, HJ, 1983
)
1
" Flutamide, at a dosage (20 mg/kg) that abolished the effects of dihydrotestosterone on the weights of these tissues, produced no alternation of the effects of estradiol."( Influence of estradiol on accessory reproductive organs in the castrated male rat. Effects of bromocriptine and flutamide.
Adlestein, LB; Belis, JA; Tarry, WF,
)
0.35
" With cautious introduction, and intermittent dosage adjustment, bromocriptine can be of long-term benefit to patients with advance Parkinson's disease."( Bromocriptine in the long-term management of advanced Parkinson's disease.
Grimes, JD; Hassan, MN, 1983
)
1.95
" The dosage was increased by determining the PRL as index."( [Study on hyperprolactinemic anovulatory syndrome and treatment with bromocriptine (author's transl)].
Fukunaga, T, 1981
)
0.5
" Therapeutic intervention with dosage adjustments and/or drug holidays are indicated when psychosis occurs."( Behavioral alterations and the therapy of parkinsonism.
Klawans, HL, 1982
)
0.26
" Mice with congenital prolactin deficiency had a similar dose-response curve of receptor loss after hCG administration, but recovered from down-regulation faster than the normal mice."( Regulation of testicular human chorionic gonadotrophin binding in prolactin-deficient Snell dwarf mice.
Amador, AG; Bartke, A, 1982
)
0.26
" Combination of the two drugs permitted rapid increase in bromocriptine dosage from 22."( Bromocriptine and domperidone in the treatment of Parkinson disease.
Agid, Y; Illas, A; Lhermitte, F; Quinn, N, 1981
)
1.95
" A low initial dose (1 mg per day) and slow escalation in dosage produced an optimal, though delayed improvement."( Bromocriptine: low-dose therapy in Parkinson disease.
Bergsrud, D; Elton, RL; Racy, A; Teychenne, PF; Vern, B, 1982
)
1.71
"Blood pressure and pulse rate were studied in 20 Parkinsonian patients on no treatment, and during treatment with bromocriptine (mean dosage 148 mg/day) as the sole anti-Parkinsonian therapy."( Bromocriptine in Parkinson's disease: a study of cardiovascular effects.
Agid, Y; Illas, A; Lhermitte, F; Quinn, N, 1981
)
1.92
" All the patients had been on mono-therapy with BCT for years, and during the 3 weeks prior to the investigation they received constant but individually different dosage regimens."( Bromocriptine concentration in saliva plasma after long-term treatment of patients with Parkinson's disease.
Friis, ML; Hvidberg, EF; Johnsen, T; Larsen, NE; Pakkenberg, H, 1980
)
1.7
" Bromocriptine in doses ranging from 1 to 20 mg/kg had no effect on tumour growth or on the excessive secretion of GH by the tumour; prolactin concentrations were reduced only by the highest dosage of the drug."( Effect of bromocriptine, ergotamine and other ergot alkaloids on the hormone secretion and growth of a rat pituitary tumour.
Jenkins, JS; Prysor-Jones, RA, 1980
)
1.57
" To avoid side effects, the starting dosage should be low (1."( Dopamine agonists in the treatment of Parkinson's disease.
Koller, WC; Pahwa, R,
)
0.13
" An antitumor effect of CG has been confirmed at a lower dosage than that of BC."( Effect of cabergoline, a dopamine agonist, on estrogen-induced rat pituitary tumors: in vitro culture studies.
Arita, K; Eguchi, K; Ito, A; Kawamoto, K; Kurisu, K; Uozumi, T, 1995
)
0.29
" We employed, as model dosage form, the Parlodel LA, a recently marketed microsphere system especially designed for bromocriptine-controlled delivery."( Kinetics of bromocriptine release from microspheres: comparative analysis between different in vitro models.
Cortesi, R; Esposito, E; Gambari, R; Menegatti, E; Nastruzzi, C,
)
0.72
" However, focal abnormality was shown in only half the patients had been on dopamine agonist therapy; the MRI findings in these 39 patients were not affected by the duration and dosage bromocriptine, nor by the time elapsed since its discontinuation."( 3D-FT thin sections MRI of prolactin-secreting pituitary microadenomas.
Brue, T; Cahen, S; Chabert-Orsini, V; Girard, N; Grisoli, F; Jaquet, P; Poncet, M; Raybaud, C, 1994
)
0.48
" Whereas FLZ and high dose of BC substantially increased the levels of HVA after the dosage (49."( Effects of bromocriptine in Huntington chorea. Case report.
Anai, K; Aoba, A; Chishima, T; Kamimura, M; Negishi, K; Sakai, T; Takagi, H; Takeshita, T; Tsuneizumi, T; Yamaguchi, N, 1994
)
0.68
" Levodopa-carbidopa in low dosage adequately controlled symptoms in most patients and delayed the appearance of dyskinesia and end of dose failure for about two years longer than conventional doses."( The Sydney Multicentre Study of Parkinson's disease: a randomised, prospective five year study comparing low dose bromocriptine with low dose levodopa-carbidopa.
Broe, GA; Hely, MA; Margrie, S; Morris, JG; O'Sullivan, DJ; Rail, D; Reid, WG; Williamson, PM, 1994
)
0.5
" PRL secretion was slightly stimulated by sCT with no apparent dose-response relationship."( In vitro control of prolactin (PRL) and growth hormone secretion of neonatal rat pituitary glands: effects of ovine PRL, salmon calcitonin, endothelin-3, angiotensin II, bromocryptine and somatostatin.
Avery, LM; Grosvenor, CE; Kacsóh, B; Tóth, BE, 1993
)
0.29
" Also, the negative immunoreactivity for Type III was predominantly observed in those cases where prolactinomas were relatively well controlled by continuous oral dosage of dopamine agonists before operation."( Immunohistochemical expression of protein kinase C type III in human pituitary adenomas.
Buchfelder, M; Fahlbusch, R; Thierauf, P; Todo, T, 1993
)
0.29
" Adverse reactions were experienced by 15 patients during dosage increment and caused one patient to discontinue the medication."( Long-term treatment of macroprolactinomas with CV 205-502.
Bakke, S; Bjøro, T; Brownell, J; Djøseland, O; Halse, J; Hansen, E; Jervell, J; Kvistborg, A, 1993
)
0.29
" Determination of plasma pituitary hormone levels is a good marker for a titration of a dosage of corticosteroid or thyroid hormone replacement."( [Recent progress in the diagnosis and treatment of hypopituitarism].
Demura, H; Demura, R, 1993
)
0.29
" The findings may provide evidence for possibilities of increasing the doses of bromocryptine in practical medicine, and for designing the injectable dosage form of the drug."( [The effect of bromocryptin on rotational activity in rats].
Atadzhanov, MA; Kucherianu, VG; Omel'nitskiĭ, PP; Sokolov, SIa,
)
0.13
" Disease duration and daily levodopa dosage were similar in the three groups."( Effect of age and disease duration on parkinsonian motor scores under levodopa therapy.
Falk, M; Künig, G; Neubauer, M; Ransmayr, G; Wagner, M, 1995
)
0.29
" Bromocriptine was given initially at a dosage of 10 mg/day, and of 25 mg/day during the follow ups."( Bromocriptine is ineffective in the treatment of chronic nonfluent aphasia.
Demirkiran, M; Mavi, H; Ozeren, A; Sarica, Y, 1995
)
2.64
" Comparative results indicated that dosage of any adjunct therapy was associated with days in treatment and standard treatment sessions attended, and that standard treatment sessions attended was associated with negative urinalysis results at follow-up."( Effectiveness of adjunct therapies in crack cocaine treatment.
Montoya, ID; Nelson, R; Richard, AJ; Spence, RT,
)
0.13
" Dosage was titrated to optimal, using up to 6 mg of CBG or 40 mg of BCR daily."( Double-blind comparison of cabergoline and bromocriptine in Parkinson's disease patients with motor fluctuations.
Catz, T; Inzelberg, R; Kippervasser, S; Korczyn, AD; Nisipeanu, P; Orlov, E; Rabey, JM; Schechtman, E, 1996
)
0.56
" Straw-carrying and hair-pulling occurred after P withdrawal in a dose-response way."( Estradiol, progesterone, and prolactin regulate maternal nest-building in rabbits.
Beyer, C; González-Mariscal, G; Jiménez, P; Melo, AI; Rosenblatt, JS, 1996
)
0.29
" Treatment of hyperprolactinemia with bromocriptine was associated with satisfactory clinical evolution, and a reduction of dosage of immunosuppressor treatment."( [Hyperprolactinemia and autoimmunity].
Compañ González, DA; Guido Bayardo, R; Martínez Aguilar, NE; Vargas Camaño, ME,
)
0.4
"To determine if the combination of levodopa (LD) plus bromocriptine (Br) in the early stages of Parkinson's disease (PD) permits reduction of LD dosage and consequently results in fewer motor fluctuations and dyskinesias, a double-blind, multicenter prospective study in 50 PD patients who had responded favorably to LD while under treatment with that drug for < or = 6 months was undertaken."( Early combination of bromocriptine and levodopa in Parkinson's disease: a prospective randomized study of two parallel groups over a total follow-up period of 44 months including an initial 8-month double-blind stage.
Burguera, JA; Chacón, J; Forcadell, F; Giménez-Roldán, S; Liaño, H; Tolosa, E, 1997
)
0.86
" Hallucinosis was not associated with age at onset of idiopathic Parkinson's disease or dosage of dopaminergic medication."( Hallucinosis in idiopathic Parkinson's disease.
Graham, JM; Grünewald, RA; Sagar, HJ, 1997
)
0.3
" The prevalence of pleuro-pulmonary diseases is between 2 to 5% after 5 years with bromocriptine that varied in dosage from 20 to 90 mg daily."( [Diffuse interstitial lung disease without pleural involvement and high-dose bromocriptine].
Allais, C; Barrault, MF; Castet, D; Marsaudon, E, 1997
)
0.75
"5 mg/day) achieved a statistically significant decrease in levodopa dosage compared with placebo (18 vs 3%) and improved the Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale scores for activities of daily living in a greater number of patients (23 vs 4%)."( Clinical experience with cabergoline in patients with advanced Parkinson's disease treated with levodopa.
Marsden, CD, 1998
)
0.3
" At the end of the observation period dopamine agonist dosage could be reduced by 50% in group 1 and by 39."( Surgery combined with dopamine agonists versus dopamine agonists alone in long-term treatment of macroprolactinoma: a retrospective study.
Finkenstedt, G; Gasser, R; Höfle, G; Mohsenipour, I, 1998
)
0.3
" This long range study demonstrates, through multiple varied dosing schedules, a trade off between the benefits and side effects of dopaminergic therapy, with implications for a larger brain injury population."( Effects of dopaminergic combination therapy for frontal lobe dysfunction in traumatic brain injury rehabilitation.
Burke, DT; Calvanio, R; Fitzpatrick, M; Karli, DC; Kim, HJ; Lepak, P; Macneil, M; Pesez, K; Temple, D, 1999
)
0.3
" switching to a low-potency or an atypical antipsychotic, lowering the dosage or discontinuing the NL, and adding a drug effective in treating EPS."( Algorithms for the treatment of acute side effects induced by neuroleptics.
Koyama, T; Kusumi, I, 1999
)
0.3
" Dosage with tamoxifen must be tailored to individual patient requirement and symptom control balanced against troublesome side-effects."( Management of breast pain.
Faiz, O; Fentiman, IS, 2000
)
0.31
" We performed a double-blind study with high dosage of BR, prescribed according to a dose-escalating protocol, comprehensive of clinical data, relatives' impression, and language evaluations."( Bromocriptine and speech therapy in non-fluent chronic aphasia after stroke.
Altieri, M; Bragoni, M; Di Piero, V; Lenzi, GL; Mostardini, C; Padovani, A, 2000
)
1.75
" Surgical treatment was considered too risky; but on reduction of bromocriptine dosage the field defect improved in both cases; there was a modest elevation of prolactin and a degree of tumour re-expansion."( Optic chiasmal herniation--an under recognized complication of dopamine agonist therapy for macroprolactinoma.
Hall, K; James, RA; Jones, SE; Kendall-Taylor, P, 2000
)
0.54
" Weanling male CD rats (21 days old) were dosed for 30 d by gavage with vehicle (0."( Evaluation of the male pubertal assay's ability to detect thyroid inhibitors and dopaminergic agents.
Carney, EW; Crissman, JW; Marty, MS, 2001
)
0.31
" The oral route is optimized by dosing every hour until stool evacuation appears."( Hepatic Encephalopathy.
Blei, AT; Córdoba, J, 2001
)
0.31
"The aim of this study was to evaluate the in-vitro release rates and in-vivo effectiveness of a controlled release, intravaginal dosage form of bromocriptine mesilate."( In-vitro and in-vivo evaluation of a matrix-controlled bromocriptine mesilate-releasing vaginal ring.
Acartürk, F; Altug, N, 2001
)
0.76
"A randomised, double-blind trial in which 555 patients were assigned to three treatment groups according to the level of daily dosage of L-dopa, presence of motor fluctuations, and use of dopamine agonist before study entry."( A six-month multicentre, double-blind, bromocriptine-controlled study of the safety and efficacy of ropinirole in the treatment of patients with Parkinson's disease not optimally controlled by L-dopa.
Brooks, DJ; Brunt, ER; Korczyn, AD; Montastruc, JL; Stocchi, F, 2002
)
0.58
" We characterized the effects of amantadine and bromocriptine on PPI across species, assessing: (1) dose-response effects on PPI in rats over 10- to 120-ms prepulse intervals; (2) drug effects on PPI in humans, using this same range of prepulse intervals; and (3) drug effects on measures related to PPI, including PPI of perceived stimulus intensity (PPIPSI), and startle habituation."( Effects of amantadine and bromocriptine on startle and sensorimotor gating: parametric studies and cross-species comparisons.
Auerbach, PP; Ross, L; Shoemaker, JM; Stephany, N; Swerdlow, NR; Talledo, J; Wasserman, LC, 2002
)
0.87
" The main risk factor associated with pathologic daytime sleep latency was high levodopa dosage equivalents (>867."( Predictors of impaired daytime sleep and wakefulness in patients with Parkinson disease treated with older (ergot) vs newer (nonergot) dopamine agonists.
Lang, AE; Razmy, A; Shapiro, CM, 2004
)
0.32
" Physicians concerned with daytime hypersomnolence in PD patients treated with dopamine agonists and receiving high levodopa dosage equivalents should consider polysomnographic monitoring for impaired daytime sleep latency."( Predictors of impaired daytime sleep and wakefulness in patients with Parkinson disease treated with older (ergot) vs newer (nonergot) dopamine agonists.
Lang, AE; Razmy, A; Shapiro, CM, 2004
)
0.32
"5-15 mg/day adjunctive to l-dopa were selected to replace bromocriptine with pergolide of the equivalent dosage approved in Japan."( Effects of pergolide on nocturia in Parkinson's disease: three female cases selected from over 400 patients.
Araki, I; Kuno, S; Mizuta, E; Yamasaki, S, 2004
)
0.57
" Tolcapone produced a greater reduction in levodopa dosage than bromocriptine."( Catechol-O-methyltransferase inhibitors versus active comparators for levodopa-induced complications in Parkinson's disease.
Clarke, CE; Deane, KH; Spieker, S, 2004
)
0.56
" However, bromocriptine requires multiple daily dosing and some patients are resistant or intolerant to this therapy."( Current treatment issues in female hyperprolactinaemia.
Crosignani, PG, 2006
)
0.74
" Quinagolide may improve patient compliance to treatment owing to its reduced side effect profile, simple and rapid titration over just 7 days, once-daily dosing regimen and easy to use starter pack (available in some countries)."( Quinagolide--a valuable treatment option for hyperprolactinaemia.
Barlier, A; Jaquet, P, 2006
)
0.33
" Given the linear dose-response relation it presents, the drug has a wide "therapeutic window" that allows the dosage to be increased as the disease progresses."( [Ropinirole in the treatment of Parkinson's disease: an update].
Vivancos-Matellano, F,
)
0.13
" However, other valvular parameters were not found to correlate with the age, disease duration, treatment duration, or dosage of medication."( Valvular heart disease in Parkinson's disease treated with ergot derivative dopamine agonists.
Chung, EJ; Kim, JY; Lee, WY; Park, SW, 2006
)
0.33
" Yet, the anoestrus is not shortened in bitches treated with metergoline, a drug, which in a low dosage lowers the plasma prolactin concentration via a serotonin-antagonistic pathway."( Anoestrus in the dog: a fascinating story.
Kooistra, HS; Okkens, AC, 2006
)
0.33
"After immunotherapy, serum PRL concentration decreased to 82 mIU/l, the patient's symptoms disappeared, skin thickness increased to normal and bromocriptine dosage was tapered to 20 mg per week."( Immunotherapy of prolactinoma with a T helper 1 activator adjuvant and autoantigens: a case report.
Abouzari, M; Aghazadeh, J; Hazrati, SM; Mohtarami, F; Rashidi, A, 2006
)
0.53
" Small dosage of bromocriptine was kept after operation."( [Bromocriptine treatment of invasive giant prolactinomas prior to comprehensive treatments: results of a long-term follow up].
Cun, EH; Sun, W; Yan, CX; Yang, J; Yu, CJ; Zhang, HW, 2006
)
1.58
" Combined with surgery and Gamma Knife, the duration of treatment could be shortened and the dosage may be minimized, but using radiotherapy should be cautions."( [Bromocriptine treatment of invasive giant prolactinomas prior to comprehensive treatments: results of a long-term follow up].
Cun, EH; Sun, W; Yan, CX; Yang, J; Yu, CJ; Zhang, HW, 2006
)
1.24
" It is not clear whether intermittent dosing or lower doses might confer benefit."( The effects of bromocriptine on attention deficits after traumatic brain injury: a placebo-controlled pilot study.
Coslett, HB; Grieb-Neff, P; Hart, T; Polansky, M; Vaccaro, M; Whyte, J, 2008
)
0.7
" Metergoline, a drug which in a low dosage lowers the plasma prolactin concentration via a serotonin-antagonistic pathway, does not shorten the anoestrus; while bromocriptine, in a dosage insufficient to cause a decrease in the plasma prolactin concentration, does prematurely induce a follicular phase."( Physiology of the canine anoestrus and methods for manipulation of its length.
Beijerink, NJ; de Gier, J; Kooistra, HS; Okkens, AC, 2008
)
0.54
" When serum prolactin was controlled at normal levels, we decreased the dosage of bromocriptine step by step (1."( [Analysis of therapeutic outcomes of polycystic ovary syndrome patients with hyperprolactinemia].
Chen, ZJ; Gao, Q; Liu, H; Ma, ZX; Sheng, Y; Shi, YH; Yan, JH, 2008
)
0.57
"Bromocriptine administration before the stimulated ovulation therapy can decrease the total dosage and treatment course of ovulating drugs."( [Analysis of therapeutic outcomes of polycystic ovary syndrome patients with hyperprolactinemia].
Chen, ZJ; Gao, Q; Liu, H; Ma, ZX; Sheng, Y; Shi, YH; Yan, JH, 2008
)
1.79
"Early abortion rat model was established by Bromocriptine at 6-8 gestation day, the model rats were treated with high and low dosage of TFCC and the progesterone as the positive control."( [Effect of total flavones from Cuscuta chinensis on expression of Th type-1/Th type-2 cytokines, serum P and PR in abortion rats model].
Ma, HX; Wang, RG; You, ZL, 2008
)
0.61
"The model rats of bromocriptine during 6-8 d of pregnancy induced early abortion was established, adopting respectively herbs in high and low dosage and progesterone affect model rat and after 12 d, Immunohistochemical was applied to determine Fas, HB-EGF and PCNA in deciduas and placenta."( [Effect of total flavones from Cuscuta chinensis on expression of Fas/FasL, PCNA and HB-EGF in SD rats model with bromocriptine-induced abortion].
Ma, HX; Wang, XY; You, ZL, 2008
)
0.89
" The type, dosage and administration period of neuroleptics, the clinical and laboratory findings; and prognosis were compared in terms of mortality."( Clinical and pharmacologic risk factors for neuroleptic malignant syndrome and their association with death.
Onder, E; Tural, U, 2010
)
0.36
" Cabergoline was discontinued and oral bromocriptine was initiated at a dosage of 10 mg daily."( Positive prolactin response to bromocriptine in 2 patients with cabergoline-resistant prolactinomas.
Iyer, P; Molitch, ME,
)
0.69
" The dosage of DAs administered were rarely evaluated."( Optimal effective doses of cabergoline and bromocriptine and valvular leasions in men with prolactinomas.
Bilge, A; Kurtulmus, N; Yarman, S, 2012
)
0.64
" In animal experiments, dopamine D2-like receptor stimulation revealed partially antagonistic effects on plasticity, which might be explained by dosage dependency."( Dosage-dependent effect of dopamine D2 receptor activation on motor cortex plasticity in humans.
Fresnoza, S; Klinker, F; Kuo, MF; Liebetanz, D; Nitsche, MA; Paulus, W; Stiksrud, E, 2014
)
0.4
" The MTT test was conducted to identify oxidative and reductive enzymes and to specify appropriate dosage at four concentrations of dopamine and Cabergoline on MCF-7 and SKBR-3 cells."( The Expression of Dopamine Receptors Gene and their Potential Role in Targeting Breast Cancer Cells with Selective Agonist and Antagonist Drugs. Could it be the Novel Insight to Therapy?
Ahangari, G; Bakhtou, H; Deezagi, A; Olfatbakhsh, A, 2019
)
0.51
" Bromocriptine represents an attractive option with high efficacy and safety profile for hyperprolactinemia-associated conditions, acromegaly, parkinsonism, type 2 diabetes mellitus and various other diseases in a variety of dosage forms for best possible beneficial effects."( Bromocriptine therapy: Review of mechanism of action, safety and tolerability.
Abbas, M; Mahmood, Q; Mahmood, Z; Malik, A; Mehmood, MH; Naz, F; Rasool, G; Riaz, M, 2022
)
3.07
[information is derived through text-mining from research data collected from National Library of Medicine (NLM), extracted Dec-2023]

Roles (4)

RoleDescription
antiparkinson drugA drug used in the treatment of Parkinson's disease.
hormone antagonistA chemical substance which inhibits the function of the endocrine glands, the biosynthesis of their secreted hormones, or the action of hormones upon their specific sites.
dopamine agonistA drug that binds to and activates dopamine receptors.
antidyskinesia agentAny compound which can be used to treat or alleviate the symptoms of dyskinesia.
[role information is derived from Chemical Entities of Biological Interest (ChEBI), Hastings J, Owen G, Dekker A, Ennis M, Kale N, Muthukrishnan V, Turner S, Swainston N, Mendes P, Steinbeck C. (2016). ChEBI in 2016: Improved services and an expanding collection of metabolites. Nucleic Acids Res]

Drug Classes (1)

ClassDescription
indole alkaloidAn alkaloid containing an indole skeleton.
[compound class information is derived from Chemical Entities of Biological Interest (ChEBI), Hastings J, Owen G, Dekker A, Ennis M, Kale N, Muthukrishnan V, Turner S, Swainston N, Mendes P, Steinbeck C. (2016). ChEBI in 2016: Improved services and an expanding collection of metabolites. Nucleic Acids Res]

Protein Targets (63)

Potency Measurements

ProteinTaxonomyMeasurementAverage (µ)Min (ref.)Avg (ref.)Max (ref.)Bioassay(s)
Chain A, MAJOR APURINIC/APYRIMIDINIC ENDONUCLEASEHomo sapiens (human)Potency0.39810.003245.467312,589.2998AID2517
dopamine D1 receptorHomo sapiens (human)Potency3.26430.00521.30228.1995AID624455
thioredoxin reductaseRattus norvegicus (Norway rat)Potency19.95260.100020.879379.4328AID588453
ATAD5 protein, partialHomo sapiens (human)Potency21.42520.004110.890331.5287AID493106; AID493107
Fumarate hydrataseHomo sapiens (human)Potency31.62280.00308.794948.0869AID1347053
GLS proteinHomo sapiens (human)Potency22.38720.35487.935539.8107AID624146
TDP1 proteinHomo sapiens (human)Potency15.28850.000811.382244.6684AID686978; AID686979
AR proteinHomo sapiens (human)Potency23.79490.000221.22318,912.5098AID743035; AID743042; AID743054; AID743063
regulator of G-protein signaling 4Homo sapiens (human)Potency8.42880.531815.435837.6858AID504845
cytochrome P450 family 3 subfamily A polypeptide 4Homo sapiens (human)Potency1.62360.01237.983543.2770AID1346984; AID1645841
glucocorticoid receptor [Homo sapiens]Homo sapiens (human)Potency3.37800.000214.376460.0339AID720692
pregnane X nuclear receptorHomo sapiens (human)Potency4.46680.005428.02631,258.9301AID1346985
estrogen nuclear receptor alphaHomo sapiens (human)Potency20.20150.000229.305416,493.5996AID743069; AID743078; AID743079
GVesicular stomatitis virusPotency3.37860.01238.964839.8107AID1645842
polyproteinZika virusPotency31.62280.00308.794948.0869AID1347053
peroxisome proliferator activated receptor gammaHomo sapiens (human)Potency9.83510.001019.414170.9645AID743094; AID743140
euchromatic histone-lysine N-methyltransferase 2Homo sapiens (human)Potency23.77810.035520.977089.1251AID504332
cytochrome P450, family 19, subfamily A, polypeptide 1, isoform CRA_aHomo sapiens (human)Potency29.84930.001723.839378.1014AID743083
D(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)Potency2.95050.02245.944922.3872AID488982; AID488983
vitamin D3 receptor isoform VDRAHomo sapiens (human)Potency28.18380.354828.065989.1251AID504847
chromobox protein homolog 1Homo sapiens (human)Potency39.81070.006026.168889.1251AID488953
thyroid hormone receptor beta isoform 2Rattus norvegicus (Norway rat)Potency14.14670.000323.4451159.6830AID743065; AID743067
serine/threonine-protein kinase mTOR isoform 1Homo sapiens (human)Potency18.49270.00378.618923.2809AID2668
peptidyl-prolyl cis-trans isomerase NIMA-interacting 1Homo sapiens (human)Potency30.13130.425612.059128.1838AID504536
Interferon betaHomo sapiens (human)Potency3.37860.00339.158239.8107AID1645842
HLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)Potency3.37860.01238.964839.8107AID1645842
Cellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)Potency29.84930.002319.595674.0614AID651631
Inositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)Potency3.37860.01238.964839.8107AID1645842
ATPase family AAA domain-containing protein 5Homo sapiens (human)Potency11.88320.011917.942071.5630AID651632; AID720516
Ataxin-2Homo sapiens (human)Potency25.84690.011912.222168.7989AID588378; AID651632
cytochrome P450 2C9, partialHomo sapiens (human)Potency3.37860.01238.964839.8107AID1645842
ATP-dependent phosphofructokinaseTrypanosoma brucei brucei TREU927Potency19.01150.060110.745337.9330AID485368
[prepared from compound, protein, and bioassay information from National Library of Medicine (NLM), extracted Dec-2023]

Inhibition Measurements

ProteinTaxonomyMeasurementAverageMin (ref.)Avg (ref.)Max (ref.)Bioassay(s)
Genome polyprotein Zika virusIC50 (µMol)17.32001.10001.94004.1000AID1608449; AID1659175
5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 4Cavia porcellus (domestic guinea pig)IC50 (µMol)0.53200.00011.00768.7800AID625218
5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 4Cavia porcellus (domestic guinea pig)Ki0.27800.00000.887110.0000AID625218
ATP-dependent translocase ABCB1Mus musculus (house mouse)Ki6.39003.50005.60676.9300AID681138
ATP-dependent translocase ABCB1Homo sapiens (human)Ki3.38500.02002.35948.5900AID681142; AID681143
Beta-1 adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)IC50 (µMol)2.40000.00021.46819.0000AID625204
Beta-1 adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)Ki1.38600.00011.33919.9840AID625204
Cytochrome P450 3A4Homo sapiens (human)IC50 (µMol)2.49960.00011.753610.0000AID428564; AID625251
5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 1AHomo sapiens (human)Ki0.02400.00010.532610.0000AID4447
Alpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)IC50 (µMol)0.01500.00001.44217.3470AID625201
Alpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)Ki0.00550.00010.807410.0000AID625201
D(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)IC50 (µMol)0.00160.00000.74728.0000AID625253
D(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)Ki0.01010.00000.651810.0000AID1154610; AID625253; AID63977
Androgen receptorRattus norvegicus (Norway rat)IC50 (µMol)2.28100.00101.979414.1600AID625228
Androgen receptorRattus norvegicus (Norway rat)Ki1.52100.00031.21858.9270AID625228
Alpha-2B adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)IC50 (µMol)0.03500.00001.23808.1590AID625202
Alpha-2B adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)Ki0.01600.00020.725710.0000AID625202
Alpha-2C adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)IC50 (µMol)0.52000.00001.47257.8980AID625203
Alpha-2C adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)Ki0.07600.00030.483410.0000AID625203
DRattus norvegicus (Norway rat)IC50 (µMol)0.02790.00030.50267.7625AID62729; AID62862
D(3) dopamine receptorRattus norvegicus (Norway rat)IC50 (µMol)0.02790.00030.39075.4000AID62729; AID62862
5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 1ARattus norvegicus (Norway rat)IC50 (µMol)0.00560.00031.38338.4000AID625190
5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 1ARattus norvegicus (Norway rat)Ki0.00320.00010.739610.0000AID625190
Alpha-2B adrenergic receptorRattus norvegicus (Norway rat)IC50 (µMol)0.51400.00031.09147.7625AID36797
ATP-dependent translocase ABCB1Mus musculus (house mouse)Ki7.48002.10004.31507.4800AID681137
D(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)IC50 (µMol)2.88900.00031.84739.2250AID625252
D(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)Ki1.44400.00010.836310.0000AID625252
Alpha-2C adrenergic receptorRattus norvegicus (Norway rat)IC50 (µMol)0.51400.00031.09147.7625AID36797
Alpha-2A adrenergic receptorRattus norvegicus (Norway rat)IC50 (µMol)0.51400.00031.06917.7625AID36797
Alpha-1D adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)IC50 (µMol)0.03000.00020.75688.8970AID625200
Alpha-1D adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)Ki0.01500.00000.360910.0000AID625200
D(1B) dopamine receptorRattus norvegicus (Norway rat)IC50 (µMol)0.02790.00030.35635.4000AID62729; AID62862
5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)IC50 (µMol)0.03600.00010.88018.8500AID625192
5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)Ki0.01000.00000.385510.0000AID625192
5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2CHomo sapiens (human)IC50 (µMol)0.53200.00011.03029.0000AID625218
5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2CHomo sapiens (human)Ki0.27800.00010.954910.0000AID625218
5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 1BRattus norvegicus (Norway rat)IC50 (µMol)0.00560.00051.48357.8000AID625190
5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 1BRattus norvegicus (Norway rat)Ki0.00320.00031.29679.2440AID625190
D(4) dopamine receptorRattus norvegicus (Norway rat)IC50 (µMol)0.02790.00030.38715.4000AID62729; AID62862
D(3) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)IC50 (µMol)0.00060.00011.01788.7960AID625254
D(3) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)Ki0.04360.00000.602010.0000AID625254; AID65774
Alpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)IC50 (µMol)24.70000.19003.82049.8000AID1695731
5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2BHomo sapiens (human)IC50 (µMol)0.00830.00011.18738.9125AID625217
5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2BHomo sapiens (human)Ki0.00530.00030.769310.0000AID625217
5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 6Homo sapiens (human)IC50 (µMol)0.02200.00170.83815.4200AID625221
5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 6Homo sapiens (human)Ki0.03000.00020.522910.0000AID238747; AID625221
D(2) dopamine receptorRattus norvegicus (Norway rat)IC50 (µMol)0.02790.00010.54948.4000AID62729; AID62862
[prepared from compound, protein, and bioassay information from National Library of Medicine (NLM), extracted Dec-2023]

Activation Measurements

ProteinTaxonomyMeasurementAverageMin (ref.)Avg (ref.)Max (ref.)Bioassay(s)
Genome polyprotein Zika virusEC50 (µMol)13.02000.02200.30730.6000AID1558332; AID1659178
D(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)EC50 (µMol)0.00050.00000.18743.9000AID1340444
5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)EC50 (µMol)0.00180.00000.22763.4750AID1340445
5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2CHomo sapiens (human)EC50 (µMol)1.58490.00010.10082.4500AID1340446
D(2) dopamine receptorRattus norvegicus (Norway rat)Kd0.00900.00030.81836.7000AID64790; AID64917; AID64919; AID64925
[prepared from compound, protein, and bioassay information from National Library of Medicine (NLM), extracted Dec-2023]

Biological Processes (525)

Processvia Protein(s)Taxonomy
cell surface receptor signaling pathway via JAK-STATInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
response to exogenous dsRNAInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
B cell activation involved in immune responseInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
cell surface receptor signaling pathwayInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
cell surface receptor signaling pathway via JAK-STATInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
response to virusInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of autophagyInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
cytokine-mediated signaling pathwayInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
natural killer cell activationInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of peptidyl-serine phosphorylation of STAT proteinInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
cellular response to interferon-betaInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
B cell proliferationInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of viral genome replicationInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
innate immune responseInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of innate immune responseInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of MHC class I biosynthetic processInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of T cell differentiationInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of transcription by RNA polymerase IIInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
defense response to virusInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
type I interferon-mediated signaling pathwayInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
neuron cellular homeostasisInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
cellular response to exogenous dsRNAInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
cellular response to virusInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of Lewy body formationInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of T-helper 2 cell cytokine productionInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of apoptotic signaling pathwayInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
response to exogenous dsRNAInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
B cell differentiationInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
natural killer cell activation involved in immune responseInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
adaptive immune responseInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
T cell activation involved in immune responseInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
humoral immune responseInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of T cell mediated cytotoxicityHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
adaptive immune responseHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
antigen processing and presentation of endogenous peptide antigen via MHC class I via ER pathway, TAP-independentHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of T cell anergyHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
defense responseHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
immune responseHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
detection of bacteriumHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of interleukin-12 productionHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of interleukin-6 productionHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
protection from natural killer cell mediated cytotoxicityHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
innate immune responseHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of dendritic cell differentiationHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
antigen processing and presentation of endogenous peptide antigen via MHC class IbHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of cell population proliferationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of cell cycleCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of cell cycle G2/M phase transitionCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
DNA damage responseCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
ER overload responseCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
cellular response to glucose starvationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
intrinsic apoptotic signaling pathway in response to DNA damage by p53 class mediatorCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of apoptotic processCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of transcription by RNA polymerase IICellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of miRNA transcriptionCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of transcription by RNA polymerase IICellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
mitophagyCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
in utero embryonic developmentCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
somitogenesisCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
release of cytochrome c from mitochondriaCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
hematopoietic progenitor cell differentiationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
T cell proliferation involved in immune responseCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
B cell lineage commitmentCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
T cell lineage commitmentCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
response to ischemiaCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
nucleotide-excision repairCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
double-strand break repairCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of DNA-templated transcriptionCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of transcription by RNA polymerase IICellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
protein import into nucleusCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
autophagyCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
DNA damage responseCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
DNA damage response, signal transduction by p53 class mediator resulting in cell cycle arrestCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
DNA damage response, signal transduction by p53 class mediator resulting in transcription of p21 class mediatorCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
transforming growth factor beta receptor signaling pathwayCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
Ras protein signal transductionCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
gastrulationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
neuroblast proliferationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of neuroblast proliferationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
protein localizationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of DNA replicationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of cell population proliferationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
determination of adult lifespanCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
mRNA transcriptionCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
rRNA transcriptionCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
response to salt stressCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
response to inorganic substanceCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
response to X-rayCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
response to gamma radiationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of gene expressionCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
cardiac muscle cell apoptotic processCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of cardiac muscle cell apoptotic processCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
glial cell proliferationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
viral processCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
glucose catabolic process to lactate via pyruvateCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
cerebellum developmentCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of cell growthCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
DNA damage response, signal transduction by p53 class mediatorCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of transforming growth factor beta receptor signaling pathwayCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
mitotic G1 DNA damage checkpoint signalingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of telomere maintenance via telomeraseCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
T cell differentiation in thymusCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
tumor necrosis factor-mediated signaling pathwayCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of tissue remodelingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
cellular response to UVCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
multicellular organism growthCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of mitochondrial membrane permeabilityCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
cellular response to glucose starvationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
intrinsic apoptotic signaling pathway in response to DNA damage by p53 class mediatorCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of apoptotic processCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of apoptotic processCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
entrainment of circadian clock by photoperiodCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
mitochondrial DNA repairCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of DNA damage response, signal transduction by p53 class mediatorCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of neuron apoptotic processCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
transcription initiation-coupled chromatin remodelingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of proteolysisCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of DNA-templated transcriptionCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of DNA-templated transcriptionCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of RNA polymerase II transcription preinitiation complex assemblyCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of transcription by RNA polymerase IICellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
response to antibioticCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
fibroblast proliferationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of fibroblast proliferationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
circadian behaviorCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
bone marrow developmentCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
embryonic organ developmentCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of peptidyl-tyrosine phosphorylationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
protein stabilizationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of helicase activityCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
protein tetramerizationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
chromosome organizationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
neuron apoptotic processCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of cell cycleCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
hematopoietic stem cell differentiationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of glial cell proliferationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
type II interferon-mediated signaling pathwayCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
cardiac septum morphogenesisCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of programmed necrotic cell deathCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
protein-containing complex assemblyCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
intrinsic apoptotic signaling pathway in response to endoplasmic reticulum stressCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
thymocyte apoptotic processCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of thymocyte apoptotic processCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
necroptotic processCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
cellular response to hypoxiaCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
cellular response to xenobiotic stimulusCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
cellular response to ionizing radiationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
cellular response to gamma radiationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
cellular response to UV-CCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
stem cell proliferationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
signal transduction by p53 class mediatorCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
intrinsic apoptotic signaling pathway by p53 class mediatorCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
reactive oxygen species metabolic processCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
cellular response to actinomycin DCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of release of cytochrome c from mitochondriaCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
cellular senescenceCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
replicative senescenceCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
oxidative stress-induced premature senescenceCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
intrinsic apoptotic signaling pathwayCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
oligodendrocyte apoptotic processCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of execution phase of apoptosisCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of mitophagyCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of mitochondrial membrane permeability involved in apoptotic processCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of intrinsic apoptotic signaling pathway by p53 class mediatorCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of miRNA transcriptionCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of G1 to G0 transitionCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of miRNA processingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of glucose catabolic process to lactate via pyruvateCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of pentose-phosphate shuntCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
intrinsic apoptotic signaling pathway in response to hypoxiaCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of fibroblast apoptotic processCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of reactive oxygen species metabolic processCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of reactive oxygen species metabolic processCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of stem cell proliferationCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of cellular senescenceCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of intrinsic apoptotic signaling pathwayCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
G2/M transition of mitotic cell cycleATP-dependent translocase ABCB1Homo sapiens (human)
xenobiotic metabolic processATP-dependent translocase ABCB1Homo sapiens (human)
response to xenobiotic stimulusATP-dependent translocase ABCB1Homo sapiens (human)
phospholipid translocationATP-dependent translocase ABCB1Homo sapiens (human)
terpenoid transportATP-dependent translocase ABCB1Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of response to osmotic stressATP-dependent translocase ABCB1Homo sapiens (human)
transmembrane transportATP-dependent translocase ABCB1Homo sapiens (human)
transepithelial transportATP-dependent translocase ABCB1Homo sapiens (human)
stem cell proliferationATP-dependent translocase ABCB1Homo sapiens (human)
ceramide translocationATP-dependent translocase ABCB1Homo sapiens (human)
export across plasma membraneATP-dependent translocase ABCB1Homo sapiens (human)
transport across blood-brain barrierATP-dependent translocase ABCB1Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of anion channel activityATP-dependent translocase ABCB1Homo sapiens (human)
carboxylic acid transmembrane transportATP-dependent translocase ABCB1Homo sapiens (human)
xenobiotic detoxification by transmembrane export across the plasma membraneATP-dependent translocase ABCB1Homo sapiens (human)
xenobiotic transport across blood-brain barrierATP-dependent translocase ABCB1Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of chloride transportATP-dependent translocase ABCB1Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of heart rate by epinephrine-norepinephrineBeta-1 adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of the force of heart contraction by epinephrine-norepinephrineBeta-1 adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
diet induced thermogenesisBeta-1 adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
response to coldBeta-1 adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
heat generationBeta-1 adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of multicellular organism growthBeta-1 adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
fear responseBeta-1 adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of circadian sleep/wake cycle, sleepBeta-1 adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
brown fat cell differentiationBeta-1 adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of postsynaptic membrane potentialBeta-1 adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
adenylate cyclase-activating adrenergic receptor signaling pathwayBeta-1 adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of cold-induced thermogenesisBeta-1 adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
norepinephrine-epinephrine-mediated vasodilation involved in regulation of systemic arterial blood pressureBeta-1 adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of MAPK cascadeBeta-1 adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
lipid hydroxylationCytochrome P450 3A4Homo sapiens (human)
lipid metabolic processCytochrome P450 3A4Homo sapiens (human)
steroid catabolic processCytochrome P450 3A4Homo sapiens (human)
xenobiotic metabolic processCytochrome P450 3A4Homo sapiens (human)
steroid metabolic processCytochrome P450 3A4Homo sapiens (human)
cholesterol metabolic processCytochrome P450 3A4Homo sapiens (human)
androgen metabolic processCytochrome P450 3A4Homo sapiens (human)
estrogen metabolic processCytochrome P450 3A4Homo sapiens (human)
alkaloid catabolic processCytochrome P450 3A4Homo sapiens (human)
monoterpenoid metabolic processCytochrome P450 3A4Homo sapiens (human)
calcitriol biosynthetic process from calciolCytochrome P450 3A4Homo sapiens (human)
xenobiotic catabolic processCytochrome P450 3A4Homo sapiens (human)
vitamin D metabolic processCytochrome P450 3A4Homo sapiens (human)
vitamin D catabolic processCytochrome P450 3A4Homo sapiens (human)
retinol metabolic processCytochrome P450 3A4Homo sapiens (human)
retinoic acid metabolic processCytochrome P450 3A4Homo sapiens (human)
long-chain fatty acid biosynthetic processCytochrome P450 3A4Homo sapiens (human)
aflatoxin metabolic processCytochrome P450 3A4Homo sapiens (human)
oxidative demethylationCytochrome P450 3A4Homo sapiens (human)
behavioral fear response5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 1AHomo sapiens (human)
G protein-coupled receptor signaling pathway5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 1AHomo sapiens (human)
adenylate cyclase-inhibiting serotonin receptor signaling pathway5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 1AHomo sapiens (human)
serotonin receptor signaling pathway5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 1AHomo sapiens (human)
gamma-aminobutyric acid signaling pathway5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 1AHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of cell population proliferation5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 1AHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of serotonin secretion5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 1AHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of vasoconstriction5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 1AHomo sapiens (human)
exploration behavior5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 1AHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of dopamine metabolic process5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 1AHomo sapiens (human)
serotonin metabolic process5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 1AHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of hormone secretion5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 1AHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of behavior5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 1AHomo sapiens (human)
chemical synaptic transmission5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 1AHomo sapiens (human)
G protein-coupled receptor signaling pathway, coupled to cyclic nucleotide second messenger5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 1AHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of cytokine productionAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
DNA replicationAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
G protein-coupled receptor signaling pathwayAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
adenylate cyclase-activating G protein-coupled receptor signaling pathwayAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
adenylate cyclase-inhibiting G protein-coupled receptor signaling pathwayAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
Ras protein signal transductionAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
Rho protein signal transductionAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
female pregnancyAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of cell population proliferationAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of norepinephrine secretionAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of vasoconstrictionAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
actin cytoskeleton organizationAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
platelet activationAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of cell migrationAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
activation of protein kinase activityAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
activation of protein kinase B activityAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of epinephrine secretionAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
cellular response to hormone stimulusAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
receptor transactivationAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
vasodilationAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
glucose homeostasisAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
fear responseAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of potassium ion transportAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of MAP kinase activityAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of MAPK cascadeAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of epidermal growth factor receptor signaling pathwayAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of calcium ion-dependent exocytosisAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of insulin secretionAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
intestinal absorptionAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
thermoceptionAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of lipid catabolic processAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of membrane protein ectodomain proteolysisAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of calcium ion transportAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of insulin secretion involved in cellular response to glucose stimulusAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of uterine smooth muscle contractionAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
adrenergic receptor signaling pathwayAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
adenylate cyclase-activating adrenergic receptor signaling pathwayAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
adenylate cyclase-inhibiting adrenergic receptor signaling pathwayAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
phospholipase C-activating adrenergic receptor signaling pathwayAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of wound healingAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
presynaptic modulation of chemical synaptic transmissionAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of calcium ion transmembrane transporter activityAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
phospholipase C-activating dopamine receptor signaling pathwayD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
temperature homeostasisD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
response to hypoxiaD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of protein phosphorylationD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
response to amphetamineD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
nervous system process involved in regulation of systemic arterial blood pressureD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of heart rateD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of sodium ion transportD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
G protein-coupled receptor internalizationD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of neuroblast proliferationD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of receptor internalizationD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
autophagyD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
adenylate cyclase-inhibiting dopamine receptor signaling pathwayD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
neuron-neuron synaptic transmissionD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
neuroblast proliferationD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
axonogenesisD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
synapse assemblyD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
sensory perception of smellD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
long-term memoryD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
grooming behaviorD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
locomotory behaviorD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
adult walking behaviorD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
protein localizationD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of cell population proliferationD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
associative learningD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
visual learningD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
response to xenobiotic stimulusD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
response to light stimulusD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
response to toxic substanceD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
response to iron ionD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
response to inactivityD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
Wnt signaling pathwayD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
striatum developmentD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
orbitofrontal cortex developmentD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
cerebral cortex GABAergic interneuron migrationD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
adenohypophysis developmentD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of cell migrationD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
peristalsisD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
auditory behaviorD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of synaptic transmission, GABAergicD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of cytokinesisD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
circadian regulation of gene expressionD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of dopamine secretionD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
response to histamineD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
response to nicotineD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of urine volumeD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of renal sodium excretionD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of multicellular organism growthD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
response to cocaineD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of circadian sleep/wake cycle, sleepD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
dopamine metabolic processD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
drinking behaviorD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of potassium ion transportD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
response to morphineD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
pigmentationD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase/protein kinase B signal transductionD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of G protein-coupled receptor signaling pathwayD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of blood pressureD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of innate immune responseD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of transcription by RNA polymerase IID(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of insulin secretionD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
acid secretionD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
behavioral response to cocaineD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
behavioral response to ethanolD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of long-term neuronal synaptic plasticityD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
response to axon injuryD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
branching morphogenesis of a nerveD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
arachidonic acid secretionD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
epithelial cell proliferationD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of epithelial cell proliferationD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of protein secretionD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
release of sequestered calcium ion into cytosolD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
dopamine uptake involved in synaptic transmissionD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of dopamine uptake involved in synaptic transmissionD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of dopamine uptake involved in synaptic transmissionD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of synapse structural plasticityD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase/protein kinase B signal transductionD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of synaptic transmission, glutamatergicD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
excitatory postsynaptic potentialD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of growth hormone secretionD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
prepulse inhibitionD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of dopamine receptor signaling pathwayD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of ERK1 and ERK2 cascadeD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of locomotion involved in locomotory behaviorD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
postsynaptic modulation of chemical synaptic transmissionD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
presynaptic modulation of chemical synaptic transmissionD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of cellular response to hypoxiaD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of glial cell-derived neurotrophic factor productionD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of long-term synaptic potentiationD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
hyaloid vascular plexus regressionD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of neuron migrationD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of cytosolic calcium ion concentrationD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of dopamine secretionD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of adenylate cyclase activityD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
phospholipase C-activating dopamine receptor signaling pathwayD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of voltage-gated calcium channel activityD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of MAPK cascadeD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
adenylate cyclase-activating adrenergic receptor signaling pathwayD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
MAPK cascadeAlpha-2B adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
angiogenesisAlpha-2B adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of vascular associated smooth muscle contractionAlpha-2B adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
G protein-coupled receptor signaling pathwayAlpha-2B adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
cell-cell signalingAlpha-2B adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
female pregnancyAlpha-2B adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of norepinephrine secretionAlpha-2B adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
platelet activationAlpha-2B adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
activation of protein kinase B activityAlpha-2B adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of epinephrine secretionAlpha-2B adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
receptor transactivationAlpha-2B adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of MAPK cascadeAlpha-2B adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of neuron differentiationAlpha-2B adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of blood pressureAlpha-2B adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of uterine smooth muscle contractionAlpha-2B adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
adrenergic receptor signaling pathwayAlpha-2B adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
adenylate cyclase-activating adrenergic receptor signaling pathwayAlpha-2B adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of smooth muscle contractionAlpha-2C adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
G protein-coupled receptor signaling pathwayAlpha-2C adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
cell-cell signalingAlpha-2C adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of norepinephrine secretionAlpha-2C adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of vasoconstrictionAlpha-2C adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
platelet activationAlpha-2C adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
activation of protein kinase B activityAlpha-2C adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of epinephrine secretionAlpha-2C adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
receptor transactivationAlpha-2C adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of MAPK cascadeAlpha-2C adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of neuron differentiationAlpha-2C adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
adrenergic receptor signaling pathwayAlpha-2C adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
adenylate cyclase-activating adrenergic receptor signaling pathwayAlpha-2C adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of insulin secretionAlpha-2C adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
temperature homeostasisD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
conditioned taste aversionD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
behavioral fear responseD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of protein phosphorylationD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
synaptic transmission, dopaminergicD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
response to amphetamineD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
protein import into nucleusD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
G protein-coupled receptor signaling pathway, coupled to cyclic nucleotide second messengerD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
adenylate cyclase-activating G protein-coupled receptor signaling pathwayD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
activation of adenylate cyclase activityD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
adenylate cyclase-activating dopamine receptor signaling pathwayD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
synapse assemblyD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
memoryD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
mating behaviorD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
grooming behaviorD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
adult walking behaviorD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
visual learningD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
response to xenobiotic stimulusD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
astrocyte developmentD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
dopamine transportD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
transmission of nerve impulseD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
neuronal action potentialD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
dentate gyrus developmentD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
striatum developmentD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
cerebral cortex GABAergic interneuron migrationD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of cell migrationD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
peristalsisD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
operant conditioningD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
synaptic transmission, glutamatergicD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of dopamine metabolic processD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
vasodilationD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
dopamine metabolic processD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
maternal behaviorD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of potassium ion transportD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
glucose importD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
habituationD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
sensitizationD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
behavioral response to cocaineD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of release of sequestered calcium ion into cytosolD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of dopamine uptake involved in synaptic transmissionD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of synaptic transmission, glutamatergicD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
prepulse inhibitionD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
phospholipase C-activating dopamine receptor signaling pathwayD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
long-term synaptic potentiationD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
long-term synaptic depressionD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
cellular response to catecholamine stimulusD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
modification of postsynaptic structureD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
presynaptic modulation of chemical synaptic transmissionD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of neuron migrationD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of MAPK cascadeD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
adenylate cyclase-activating adrenergic receptor signaling pathwayD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
dopamine receptor signaling pathwayD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
G protein-coupled receptor signaling pathwayAlpha-1D adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
adenylate cyclase-modulating G protein-coupled receptor signaling pathwayAlpha-1D adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of cell population proliferationAlpha-1D adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
neuron-glial cell signalingAlpha-1D adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
cell-cell signalingAlpha-1D adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
adenylate cyclase-activating adrenergic receptor signaling pathwayAlpha-1D adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
phospholipase C-activating G protein-coupled receptor signaling pathwayAlpha-1D adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of cytosolic calcium ion concentrationAlpha-1D adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of vasoconstrictionAlpha-1D adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of MAPK cascadeAlpha-1D adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
temperature homeostasis5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of cytokine production involved in immune response5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
glycolytic process5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
intracellular calcium ion homeostasis5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
activation of phospholipase C activity5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of cytosolic calcium ion concentration5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
memory5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of cell population proliferation5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
response to xenobiotic stimulus5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of phosphatidylinositol biosynthetic process5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of dopamine secretion5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
artery smooth muscle contraction5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
urinary bladder smooth muscle contraction5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of heat generation5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of potassium ion transport5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase/protein kinase B signal transduction5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of neuron apoptotic process5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
protein localization to cytoskeleton5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of fat cell differentiation5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of glycolytic process5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of vasoconstriction5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
symbiont entry into host cell5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
sensitization5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
behavioral response to cocaine5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of inflammatory response5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of peptidyl-tyrosine phosphorylation5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
detection of temperature stimulus involved in sensory perception of pain5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
detection of mechanical stimulus involved in sensory perception of pain5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
release of sequestered calcium ion into cytosol5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of synaptic transmission, glutamatergic5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of ERK1 and ERK2 cascade5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
G protein-coupled serotonin receptor signaling pathway5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
presynaptic modulation of chemical synaptic transmission5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of execution phase of apoptosis5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of platelet aggregation5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of DNA biosynthetic process5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
G protein-coupled receptor signaling pathway, coupled to cyclic nucleotide second messenger5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
phospholipase C-activating serotonin receptor signaling pathway5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
serotonin receptor signaling pathway5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
chemical synaptic transmission5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
behavioral fear response5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2CHomo sapiens (human)
intracellular calcium ion homeostasis5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2CHomo sapiens (human)
phospholipase C-activating G protein-coupled receptor signaling pathway5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2CHomo sapiens (human)
phospholipase C-activating serotonin receptor signaling pathway5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2CHomo sapiens (human)
locomotory behavior5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2CHomo sapiens (human)
feeding behavior5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2CHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of phosphatidylinositol biosynthetic process5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2CHomo sapiens (human)
cGMP-mediated signaling5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2CHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of nervous system process5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2CHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of appetite5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2CHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of corticotropin-releasing hormone secretion5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2CHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of fat cell differentiation5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2CHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of calcium-mediated signaling5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2CHomo sapiens (human)
release of sequestered calcium ion into cytosol5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2CHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of ERK1 and ERK2 cascade5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2CHomo sapiens (human)
G protein-coupled serotonin receptor signaling pathway5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2CHomo sapiens (human)
serotonin receptor signaling pathway5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2CHomo sapiens (human)
G protein-coupled receptor signaling pathway, coupled to cyclic nucleotide second messenger5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2CHomo sapiens (human)
chemical synaptic transmission5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2CHomo sapiens (human)
response to ethanolD(3) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
synaptic transmission, dopaminergicD(3) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
G protein-coupled receptor internalizationD(3) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
intracellular calcium ion homeostasisD(3) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
G protein-coupled receptor signaling pathwayD(3) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
adenylate cyclase-activating dopamine receptor signaling pathwayD(3) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
adenylate cyclase-inhibiting dopamine receptor signaling pathwayD(3) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
learning or memoryD(3) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
learningD(3) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
locomotory behaviorD(3) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
visual learningD(3) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
response to xenobiotic stimulusD(3) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of dopamine secretionD(3) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of cytokinesisD(3) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
circadian regulation of gene expressionD(3) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
response to histamineD(3) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
social behaviorD(3) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
response to cocaineD(3) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
dopamine metabolic processD(3) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
response to morphineD(3) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of blood pressureD(3) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of mitotic nuclear divisionD(3) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
acid secretionD(3) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
behavioral response to cocaineD(3) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of oligodendrocyte differentiationD(3) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
arachidonic acid secretionD(3) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of protein secretionD(3) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
musculoskeletal movement, spinal reflex actionD(3) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of dopamine uptake involved in synaptic transmissionD(3) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase/protein kinase B signal transductionD(3) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
prepulse inhibitionD(3) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of dopamine receptor signaling pathwayD(3) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of adenylate cyclase activityD(3) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
adenylate cyclase-activating adrenergic receptor signaling pathwayD(3) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of voltage-gated calcium channel activityD(3) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of potassium ion transportD(3) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
phospholipase C-activating dopamine receptor signaling pathwayD(3) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of MAPK cascadeD(3) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of cytosolic calcium ion concentrationD(3) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of synaptic transmission, glutamatergicD(3) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
calcium ion homeostasisAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of transcription by RNA polymerase IIAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
microglial cell activationAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of receptor recyclingAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of neurotransmitter secretionAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of protein kinase activityAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
fatty acid metabolic processAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
neutral lipid metabolic processAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
phospholipid metabolic processAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
activation of cysteine-type endopeptidase activity involved in apoptotic processAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
mitochondrial membrane organizationAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
adult locomotory behaviorAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
response to xenobiotic stimulusAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
response to iron(II) ionAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of phospholipase activityAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of platelet-derived growth factor receptor signaling pathwayAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of glutamate secretionAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of dopamine secretionAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
synaptic vesicle exocytosisAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
synaptic vesicle primingAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of transmembrane transporter activityAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of microtubule polymerizationAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
receptor internalizationAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
protein destabilizationAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
response to magnesium ionAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of transporter activityAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
response to lipopolysaccharideAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of monooxygenase activityAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of peptidyl-serine phosphorylationAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
response to type II interferonAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
cellular response to oxidative stressAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
SNARE complex assemblyAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of SNARE complex assemblyAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of locomotionAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
dopamine biosynthetic processAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
mitochondrial ATP synthesis coupled electron transportAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of macrophage activationAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of apoptotic processAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of apoptotic processAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of cysteine-type endopeptidase activity involved in apoptotic processAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of neuron apoptotic processAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of endocytosisAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of exocytosisAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of exocytosisAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of long-term neuronal synaptic plasticityAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
synaptic vesicle endocytosisAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
synaptic vesicle transportAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of inflammatory responseAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of acyl-CoA biosynthetic processAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
protein tetramerizationAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of release of sequestered calcium ion into cytosolAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
neuron apoptotic processAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
dopamine uptake involved in synaptic transmissionAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of dopamine uptake involved in synaptic transmissionAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of serotonin uptakeAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of norepinephrine uptakeAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of norepinephrine uptakeAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
excitatory postsynaptic potentialAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
long-term synaptic potentiationAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of inositol phosphate biosynthetic processAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of thrombin-activated receptor signaling pathwayAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
response to interleukin-1Alpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
cellular response to copper ionAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
cellular response to epinephrine stimulusAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of protein serine/threonine kinase activityAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
supramolecular fiber organizationAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of mitochondrial electron transport, NADH to ubiquinoneAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of glutathione peroxidase activityAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of hydrogen peroxide catabolic processAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of synaptic vesicle recyclingAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of reactive oxygen species biosynthetic processAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of protein localization to cell peripheryAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of chaperone-mediated autophagyAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of presynapse assemblyAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
amyloid fibril formationAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
synapse organizationAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
chemical synaptic transmissionAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
neural crest cell migration5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2BHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of cytokine production5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2BHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of endothelial cell proliferation5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2BHomo sapiens (human)
G protein-coupled receptor internalization5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2BHomo sapiens (human)
heart morphogenesis5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2BHomo sapiens (human)
cardiac muscle hypertrophy5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2BHomo sapiens (human)
intracellular calcium ion homeostasis5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2BHomo sapiens (human)
G protein-coupled receptor signaling pathway5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2BHomo sapiens (human)
activation of phospholipase C activity5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2BHomo sapiens (human)
protein kinase C-activating G protein-coupled receptor signaling pathway5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2BHomo sapiens (human)
phospholipase C-activating serotonin receptor signaling pathway5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2BHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of cell population proliferation5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2BHomo sapiens (human)
response to xenobiotic stimulus5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2BHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of phosphatidylinositol biosynthetic process5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2BHomo sapiens (human)
neural crest cell differentiation5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2BHomo sapiens (human)
intestine smooth muscle contraction5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2BHomo sapiens (human)
phosphorylation5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2BHomo sapiens (human)
calcium-mediated signaling5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2BHomo sapiens (human)
cGMP-mediated signaling5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2BHomo sapiens (human)
vasoconstriction5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2BHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of apoptotic process5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2BHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of canonical NF-kappaB signal transduction5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2BHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of MAP kinase activity5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2BHomo sapiens (human)
phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase/protein kinase B signal transduction5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2BHomo sapiens (human)
embryonic morphogenesis5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2BHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of behavior5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2BHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of nitric-oxide synthase activity5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2BHomo sapiens (human)
release of sequestered calcium ion into cytosol5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2BHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of cell division5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2BHomo sapiens (human)
ERK1 and ERK2 cascade5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2BHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of ERK1 and ERK2 cascade5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2BHomo sapiens (human)
protein kinase C signaling5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2BHomo sapiens (human)
cellular response to temperature stimulus5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2BHomo sapiens (human)
G protein-coupled serotonin receptor signaling pathway5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2BHomo sapiens (human)
G protein-coupled receptor signaling pathway, coupled to cyclic nucleotide second messenger5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2BHomo sapiens (human)
serotonin receptor signaling pathway5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2BHomo sapiens (human)
chemical synaptic transmission5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2BHomo sapiens (human)
cerebral cortex cell migration5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 6Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of TOR signaling5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 6Homo sapiens (human)
G protein-coupled serotonin receptor signaling pathway5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 6Homo sapiens (human)
chemical synaptic transmission5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 6Homo sapiens (human)
adenylate cyclase-modulating G protein-coupled receptor signaling pathway5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 6Homo sapiens (human)
G protein-coupled receptor signaling pathway, coupled to cyclic nucleotide second messenger5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 6Homo sapiens (human)
inositol phosphate metabolic processInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
phosphatidylinositol phosphate biosynthetic processInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of cold-induced thermogenesisInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
inositol phosphate biosynthetic processInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
cell population proliferationATPase family AAA domain-containing protein 5Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of B cell proliferationATPase family AAA domain-containing protein 5Homo sapiens (human)
nuclear DNA replicationATPase family AAA domain-containing protein 5Homo sapiens (human)
signal transduction in response to DNA damageATPase family AAA domain-containing protein 5Homo sapiens (human)
intrinsic apoptotic signaling pathway in response to DNA damage by p53 class mediatorATPase family AAA domain-containing protein 5Homo sapiens (human)
isotype switchingATPase family AAA domain-containing protein 5Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of DNA replicationATPase family AAA domain-containing protein 5Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of isotype switching to IgG isotypesATPase family AAA domain-containing protein 5Homo sapiens (human)
DNA clamp unloadingATPase family AAA domain-containing protein 5Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of mitotic cell cycle phase transitionATPase family AAA domain-containing protein 5Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of intrinsic apoptotic signaling pathway in response to DNA damage by p53 class mediatorATPase family AAA domain-containing protein 5Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of cell cycle G2/M phase transitionATPase family AAA domain-containing protein 5Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of receptor internalizationAtaxin-2Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of translationAtaxin-2Homo sapiens (human)
RNA metabolic processAtaxin-2Homo sapiens (human)
P-body assemblyAtaxin-2Homo sapiens (human)
stress granule assemblyAtaxin-2Homo sapiens (human)
RNA transportAtaxin-2Homo sapiens (human)
[Information is prepared from geneontology information from the June-17-2024 release]

Molecular Functions (142)

Processvia Protein(s)Taxonomy
cytokine activityInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
cytokine receptor bindingInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
type I interferon receptor bindingInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
protein bindingInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
chloramphenicol O-acetyltransferase activityInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
TAP bindingHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
signaling receptor bindingHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
protein bindingHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
peptide antigen bindingHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
TAP bindingHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
protein-folding chaperone bindingHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
transcription cis-regulatory region bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
RNA polymerase II cis-regulatory region sequence-specific DNA bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
DNA-binding transcription factor activity, RNA polymerase II-specificCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
cis-regulatory region sequence-specific DNA bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
core promoter sequence-specific DNA bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
TFIID-class transcription factor complex bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
DNA-binding transcription repressor activity, RNA polymerase II-specificCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
DNA-binding transcription activator activity, RNA polymerase II-specificCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
protease bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
p53 bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
DNA bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
chromatin bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
DNA-binding transcription factor activityCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
mRNA 3'-UTR bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
copper ion bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
protein bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
zinc ion bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
enzyme bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
receptor tyrosine kinase bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
ubiquitin protein ligase bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
histone deacetylase regulator activityCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
ATP-dependent DNA/DNA annealing activityCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
identical protein bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
histone deacetylase bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
protein heterodimerization activityCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
protein-folding chaperone bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
protein phosphatase 2A bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
RNA polymerase II-specific DNA-binding transcription factor bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
14-3-3 protein bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
MDM2/MDM4 family protein bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
disordered domain specific bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
general transcription initiation factor bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
molecular function activator activityCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
promoter-specific chromatin bindingCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
protein bindingATP-dependent translocase ABCB1Homo sapiens (human)
ATP bindingATP-dependent translocase ABCB1Homo sapiens (human)
ABC-type xenobiotic transporter activityATP-dependent translocase ABCB1Homo sapiens (human)
efflux transmembrane transporter activityATP-dependent translocase ABCB1Homo sapiens (human)
ATP hydrolysis activityATP-dependent translocase ABCB1Homo sapiens (human)
transmembrane transporter activityATP-dependent translocase ABCB1Homo sapiens (human)
ubiquitin protein ligase bindingATP-dependent translocase ABCB1Homo sapiens (human)
ATPase-coupled transmembrane transporter activityATP-dependent translocase ABCB1Homo sapiens (human)
xenobiotic transmembrane transporter activityATP-dependent translocase ABCB1Homo sapiens (human)
carboxylic acid transmembrane transporter activityATP-dependent translocase ABCB1Homo sapiens (human)
phosphatidylcholine floppase activityATP-dependent translocase ABCB1Homo sapiens (human)
phosphatidylethanolamine flippase activityATP-dependent translocase ABCB1Homo sapiens (human)
ceramide floppase activityATP-dependent translocase ABCB1Homo sapiens (human)
floppase activityATP-dependent translocase ABCB1Homo sapiens (human)
beta-adrenergic receptor activityBeta-1 adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
beta1-adrenergic receptor activityBeta-1 adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
protein bindingBeta-1 adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
PDZ domain bindingBeta-1 adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
alpha-2A adrenergic receptor bindingBeta-1 adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
protein heterodimerization activityBeta-1 adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
G protein-coupled neurotransmitter receptor activity involved in regulation of postsynaptic membrane potentialBeta-1 adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
monooxygenase activityCytochrome P450 3A4Homo sapiens (human)
steroid bindingCytochrome P450 3A4Homo sapiens (human)
iron ion bindingCytochrome P450 3A4Homo sapiens (human)
protein bindingCytochrome P450 3A4Homo sapiens (human)
steroid hydroxylase activityCytochrome P450 3A4Homo sapiens (human)
retinoic acid 4-hydroxylase activityCytochrome P450 3A4Homo sapiens (human)
oxidoreductase activityCytochrome P450 3A4Homo sapiens (human)
oxygen bindingCytochrome P450 3A4Homo sapiens (human)
enzyme bindingCytochrome P450 3A4Homo sapiens (human)
heme bindingCytochrome P450 3A4Homo sapiens (human)
vitamin D3 25-hydroxylase activityCytochrome P450 3A4Homo sapiens (human)
caffeine oxidase activityCytochrome P450 3A4Homo sapiens (human)
quinine 3-monooxygenase activityCytochrome P450 3A4Homo sapiens (human)
testosterone 6-beta-hydroxylase activityCytochrome P450 3A4Homo sapiens (human)
1-alpha,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 23-hydroxylase activityCytochrome P450 3A4Homo sapiens (human)
anandamide 8,9 epoxidase activityCytochrome P450 3A4Homo sapiens (human)
anandamide 11,12 epoxidase activityCytochrome P450 3A4Homo sapiens (human)
anandamide 14,15 epoxidase activityCytochrome P450 3A4Homo sapiens (human)
aromatase activityCytochrome P450 3A4Homo sapiens (human)
vitamin D 24-hydroxylase activityCytochrome P450 3A4Homo sapiens (human)
estrogen 16-alpha-hydroxylase activityCytochrome P450 3A4Homo sapiens (human)
estrogen 2-hydroxylase activityCytochrome P450 3A4Homo sapiens (human)
1,8-cineole 2-exo-monooxygenase activityCytochrome P450 3A4Homo sapiens (human)
G protein-coupled serotonin receptor activity5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 1AHomo sapiens (human)
protein binding5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 1AHomo sapiens (human)
receptor-receptor interaction5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 1AHomo sapiens (human)
neurotransmitter receptor activity5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 1AHomo sapiens (human)
serotonin binding5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 1AHomo sapiens (human)
alpha2-adrenergic receptor activityAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
protein bindingAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
protein kinase bindingAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
alpha-1B adrenergic receptor bindingAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
alpha-2C adrenergic receptor bindingAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
thioesterase bindingAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
heterotrimeric G-protein bindingAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
protein homodimerization activityAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
protein heterodimerization activityAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
epinephrine bindingAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
norepinephrine bindingAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
guanyl-nucleotide exchange factor activityAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
dopamine neurotransmitter receptor activity, coupled via Gi/GoD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
G-protein alpha-subunit bindingD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
protein bindingD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
heterotrimeric G-protein bindingD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
dopamine bindingD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
ionotropic glutamate receptor bindingD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
identical protein bindingD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
heterocyclic compound bindingD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
G protein-coupled receptor activityD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
alpha2-adrenergic receptor activityAlpha-2B adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
protein bindingAlpha-2B adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
epinephrine bindingAlpha-2B adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
alpha2-adrenergic receptor activityAlpha-2C adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
protein bindingAlpha-2C adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
alpha-2A adrenergic receptor bindingAlpha-2C adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
protein homodimerization activityAlpha-2C adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
protein heterodimerization activityAlpha-2C adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
epinephrine bindingAlpha-2C adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
guanyl-nucleotide exchange factor activityAlpha-2C adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
ATPase-coupled transmembrane transporter activityATP-dependent translocase ABCB1Mus musculus (house mouse)
dopamine neurotransmitter receptor activity, coupled via GsD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
G-protein alpha-subunit bindingD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
dopamine neurotransmitter receptor activityD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
protein bindingD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
heterotrimeric G-protein bindingD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
dopamine bindingD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
arrestin family protein bindingD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
G protein-coupled receptor activityD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
protein bindingAlpha-1D adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
identical protein bindingAlpha-1D adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
alpha1-adrenergic receptor activityAlpha-1D adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
Gq/11-coupled serotonin receptor activity5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
virus receptor activity5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
G protein-coupled serotonin receptor activity5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
protein binding5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
protein tyrosine kinase activator activity5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
identical protein binding5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
protein-containing complex binding5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
serotonin binding5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
1-(4-iodo-2,5-dimethoxyphenyl)propan-2-amine binding5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
neurotransmitter receptor activity5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
Gq/11-coupled serotonin receptor activity5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2CHomo sapiens (human)
G protein-coupled serotonin receptor activity5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2CHomo sapiens (human)
protein binding5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2CHomo sapiens (human)
identical protein binding5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2CHomo sapiens (human)
serotonin binding5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2CHomo sapiens (human)
1-(4-iodo-2,5-dimethoxyphenyl)propan-2-amine binding5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2CHomo sapiens (human)
neurotransmitter receptor activity5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2CHomo sapiens (human)
dopamine neurotransmitter receptor activity, coupled via Gi/GoD(3) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
protein bindingD(3) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
G protein-coupled receptor activityD(3) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
fatty acid bindingAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
phospholipase D inhibitor activityAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
SNARE bindingAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
magnesium ion bindingAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
transcription cis-regulatory region bindingAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
actin bindingAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
protein kinase inhibitor activityAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
copper ion bindingAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
calcium ion bindingAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
protein bindingAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
phospholipid bindingAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
ferrous iron bindingAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
zinc ion bindingAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
lipid bindingAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
oxidoreductase activityAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
kinesin bindingAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
Hsp70 protein bindingAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
histone bindingAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
identical protein bindingAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
alpha-tubulin bindingAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
cysteine-type endopeptidase inhibitor activity involved in apoptotic processAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
tau protein bindingAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
phosphoprotein bindingAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
molecular adaptor activityAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
dynein complex bindingAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
cuprous ion bindingAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
Gq/11-coupled serotonin receptor activity5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2BHomo sapiens (human)
G-protein alpha-subunit binding5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2BHomo sapiens (human)
G protein-coupled serotonin receptor activity5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2BHomo sapiens (human)
GTPase activator activity5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2BHomo sapiens (human)
protein binding5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2BHomo sapiens (human)
serotonin binding5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2BHomo sapiens (human)
neurotransmitter receptor activity5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2BHomo sapiens (human)
histamine receptor activity5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 6Homo sapiens (human)
protein binding5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 6Homo sapiens (human)
neurotransmitter receptor activity5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 6Homo sapiens (human)
G protein-coupled serotonin receptor activity5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 6Homo sapiens (human)
inositol-1,3,4,5,6-pentakisphosphate kinase activityInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
inositol hexakisphosphate kinase activityInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
inositol heptakisphosphate kinase activityInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
inositol hexakisphosphate 5-kinase activityInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
protein bindingInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
ATP bindingInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
inositol hexakisphosphate 1-kinase activityInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
inositol hexakisphosphate 3-kinase activityInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
inositol 5-diphosphate pentakisphosphate 5-kinase activityInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
inositol diphosphate tetrakisphosphate kinase activityInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
protein bindingATPase family AAA domain-containing protein 5Homo sapiens (human)
ATP bindingATPase family AAA domain-containing protein 5Homo sapiens (human)
ATP hydrolysis activityATPase family AAA domain-containing protein 5Homo sapiens (human)
DNA clamp unloader activityATPase family AAA domain-containing protein 5Homo sapiens (human)
DNA bindingATPase family AAA domain-containing protein 5Homo sapiens (human)
RNA bindingAtaxin-2Homo sapiens (human)
epidermal growth factor receptor bindingAtaxin-2Homo sapiens (human)
protein bindingAtaxin-2Homo sapiens (human)
mRNA bindingAtaxin-2Homo sapiens (human)
[Information is prepared from geneontology information from the June-17-2024 release]

Ceullar Components (88)

Processvia Protein(s)Taxonomy
extracellular spaceInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
extracellular regionInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
Golgi membraneHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
endoplasmic reticulumHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
Golgi apparatusHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
plasma membraneHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
cell surfaceHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
ER to Golgi transport vesicle membraneHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
membraneHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
secretory granule membraneHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
phagocytic vesicle membraneHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
early endosome membraneHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
recycling endosome membraneHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
extracellular exosomeHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
lumenal side of endoplasmic reticulum membraneHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
MHC class I protein complexHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
extracellular spaceHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
external side of plasma membraneHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
nuclear bodyCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
nucleusCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
nucleoplasmCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
replication forkCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
nucleolusCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
cytoplasmCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
mitochondrionCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
mitochondrial matrixCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
endoplasmic reticulumCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
centrosomeCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
cytosolCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
nuclear matrixCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
PML bodyCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
transcription repressor complexCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
site of double-strand breakCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
germ cell nucleusCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
chromatinCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
transcription regulator complexCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
protein-containing complexCellular tumor antigen p53Homo sapiens (human)
cytoplasmATP-dependent translocase ABCB1Homo sapiens (human)
plasma membraneATP-dependent translocase ABCB1Homo sapiens (human)
cell surfaceATP-dependent translocase ABCB1Homo sapiens (human)
membraneATP-dependent translocase ABCB1Homo sapiens (human)
apical plasma membraneATP-dependent translocase ABCB1Homo sapiens (human)
extracellular exosomeATP-dependent translocase ABCB1Homo sapiens (human)
external side of apical plasma membraneATP-dependent translocase ABCB1Homo sapiens (human)
plasma membraneATP-dependent translocase ABCB1Homo sapiens (human)
early endosomeBeta-1 adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
plasma membraneBeta-1 adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
Schaffer collateral - CA1 synapseBeta-1 adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
neuronal dense core vesicleBeta-1 adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
plasma membraneBeta-1 adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
cytoplasmCytochrome P450 3A4Homo sapiens (human)
endoplasmic reticulum membraneCytochrome P450 3A4Homo sapiens (human)
intracellular membrane-bounded organelleCytochrome P450 3A4Homo sapiens (human)
plasma membrane5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 1AHomo sapiens (human)
synapse5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 1AHomo sapiens (human)
plasma membrane5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 1AHomo sapiens (human)
dendrite5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 1AHomo sapiens (human)
cytoplasmAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
plasma membraneAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
basolateral plasma membraneAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
neuronal cell bodyAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
axon terminusAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
presynaptic active zone membraneAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
dopaminergic synapseAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
postsynaptic density membraneAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
glutamatergic synapseAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
GABA-ergic synapseAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
receptor complexAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
plasma membraneAlpha-2A adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
Golgi membraneD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
acrosomal vesicleD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
plasma membraneD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
ciliumD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
lateral plasma membraneD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
endocytic vesicleD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
axonD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
dendriteD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
synaptic vesicle membraneD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
sperm flagellumD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
dendritic spineD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
perikaryonD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
axon terminusD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
postsynaptic membraneD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
ciliary membraneD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
non-motile ciliumD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
dopaminergic synapseD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
GABA-ergic synapseD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
G protein-coupled receptor complexD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
glutamatergic synapseD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
presynaptic membraneD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
plasma membraneD(2) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
cytosolAlpha-2B adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
plasma membraneAlpha-2B adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
cell surfaceAlpha-2B adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
intracellular membrane-bounded organelleAlpha-2B adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
plasma membraneAlpha-2B adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
cytoplasmAlpha-2C adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
endosomeAlpha-2C adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
plasma membraneAlpha-2C adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
plasma membraneAlpha-2C adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
plasma membraneATP-dependent translocase ABCB1Mus musculus (house mouse)
nucleusD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
endoplasmic reticulum membraneD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
plasma membraneD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
ciliumD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
presynaptic membraneD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
dendritic spineD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
postsynaptic membraneD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
ciliary membraneD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
non-motile ciliumD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
glutamatergic synapseD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
GABA-ergic synapseD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
G protein-coupled receptor complexD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
plasma membraneD(1A) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
plasma membraneAlpha-1D adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
plasma membraneAlpha-1D adrenergic receptorHomo sapiens (human)
neurofilament5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
plasma membrane5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
caveola5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
axon5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
cytoplasmic vesicle5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
presynaptic membrane5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
neuronal cell body5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
dendritic shaft5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
postsynaptic membrane5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
cell body fiber5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
glutamatergic synapse5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
G protein-coupled serotonin receptor complex5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
plasma membrane5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
dendrite5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2AHomo sapiens (human)
plasma membrane5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2CHomo sapiens (human)
synapse5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2CHomo sapiens (human)
G protein-coupled serotonin receptor complex5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2CHomo sapiens (human)
plasma membrane5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2CHomo sapiens (human)
dendrite5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2CHomo sapiens (human)
plasma membraneD(3) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
synapseD(3) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
plasma membraneD(3) dopamine receptorHomo sapiens (human)
platelet alpha granule membraneAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
extracellular regionAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
extracellular spaceAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
nucleusAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
cytoplasmAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
mitochondrionAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
lysosomeAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
cytosolAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
plasma membraneAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
cell cortexAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
actin cytoskeletonAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
membraneAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
inclusion bodyAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
axonAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
growth coneAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
synaptic vesicle membraneAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
perinuclear region of cytoplasmAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
postsynapseAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
supramolecular fiberAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
protein-containing complexAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
cytoplasmAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
axon terminusAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
neuronal cell bodyAlpha-synucleinHomo sapiens (human)
nucleoplasm5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2BHomo sapiens (human)
cytoplasm5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2BHomo sapiens (human)
plasma membrane5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2BHomo sapiens (human)
synapse5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2BHomo sapiens (human)
G protein-coupled serotonin receptor complex5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2BHomo sapiens (human)
dendrite5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2BHomo sapiens (human)
plasma membrane5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 2BHomo sapiens (human)
plasma membrane5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 6Homo sapiens (human)
cilium5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 6Homo sapiens (human)
synapse5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 6Homo sapiens (human)
dendrite5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 6Homo sapiens (human)
plasma membrane5-hydroxytryptamine receptor 6Homo sapiens (human)
fibrillar centerInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
nucleoplasmInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
cytosolInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
nucleusInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
cytoplasmInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
Elg1 RFC-like complexATPase family AAA domain-containing protein 5Homo sapiens (human)
nucleusATPase family AAA domain-containing protein 5Homo sapiens (human)
cytoplasmAtaxin-2Homo sapiens (human)
Golgi apparatusAtaxin-2Homo sapiens (human)
trans-Golgi networkAtaxin-2Homo sapiens (human)
cytosolAtaxin-2Homo sapiens (human)
cytoplasmic stress granuleAtaxin-2Homo sapiens (human)
membraneAtaxin-2Homo sapiens (human)
perinuclear region of cytoplasmAtaxin-2Homo sapiens (human)
ribonucleoprotein complexAtaxin-2Homo sapiens (human)
cytoplasmic stress granuleAtaxin-2Homo sapiens (human)
[Information is prepared from geneontology information from the June-17-2024 release]

Bioassays (207)

Assay IDTitleYearJournalArticle
AID1645848NCATS Kinetic Aqueous Solubility Profiling2019Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry, 07-15, Volume: 27, Issue:14
Predictive models of aqueous solubility of organic compounds built on A large dataset of high integrity.
AID1346987P-glycoprotein substrates identified in KB-8-5-11 adenocarcinoma cell line, qHTS therapeutic library screen2019Molecular pharmacology, 11, Volume: 96, Issue:5
A High-Throughput Screen of a Library of Therapeutics Identifies Cytotoxic Substrates of P-glycoprotein.
AID1346986P-glycoprotein substrates identified in KB-3-1 adenocarcinoma cell line, qHTS therapeutic library screen2019Molecular pharmacology, 11, Volume: 96, Issue:5
A High-Throughput Screen of a Library of Therapeutics Identifies Cytotoxic Substrates of P-glycoprotein.
AID1296008Cytotoxic Profiling of Annotated Libraries Using Quantitative High-Throughput Screening2020SLAS discovery : advancing life sciences R & D, 01, Volume: 25, Issue:1
Cytotoxic Profiling of Annotated and Diverse Chemical Libraries Using Quantitative High-Throughput Screening.
AID1508591NCATS Rat Liver Microsome Stability Profiling2020Scientific reports, 11-26, Volume: 10, Issue:1
Retrospective assessment of rat liver microsomal stability at NCATS: data and QSAR models.
AID1346528Human 5-HT1D receptor (5-Hydroxytryptamine receptors)2002The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics, Nov, Volume: 303, Issue:2
Differential actions of antiparkinson agents at multiple classes of monoaminergic receptor. I. A multivariate analysis of the binding profiles of 14 drugs at 21 native and cloned human receptor subtypes.
AID1345879Human D5 receptor (Dopamine receptors)2002The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics, Nov, Volume: 303, Issue:2
Differential actions of antiparkinson agents at multiple classes of monoaminergic receptor. I. A multivariate analysis of the binding profiles of 14 drugs at 21 native and cloned human receptor subtypes.
AID624235Agonists at Human 5-Hydroxytryptamine receptor 5-HT2A2002The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics, Nov, Volume: 303, Issue:2
Differential actions of antiparkinson agents at multiple classes of monoaminergic receptor. I. A multivariate analysis of the binding profiles of 14 drugs at 21 native and cloned human receptor subtypes.
AID1345235Rat 5-HT7 receptor (5-Hydroxytryptamine receptors)1993The Journal of biological chemistry, Aug-25, Volume: 268, Issue:24
Molecular cloning and expression of a 5-hydroxytryptamine7 serotonin receptor subtype.
AID1345833Human D3 receptor (Dopamine receptors)2002The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics, Nov, Volume: 303, Issue:2
Differential actions of antiparkinson agents at multiple classes of monoaminergic receptor. I. A multivariate analysis of the binding profiles of 14 drugs at 21 native and cloned human receptor subtypes.
AID1345718Human D1 receptor (Dopamine receptors)2002The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics, Nov, Volume: 303, Issue:2
Differential actions of antiparkinson agents at multiple classes of monoaminergic receptor. I. A multivariate analysis of the binding profiles of 14 drugs at 21 native and cloned human receptor subtypes.
AID624210Agonists at Human 5-Hydroxytryptamine receptor 5-HT1A2002The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics, Nov, Volume: 303, Issue:2
Differential actions of antiparkinson agents at multiple classes of monoaminergic receptor. I. A multivariate analysis of the binding profiles of 14 drugs at 21 native and cloned human receptor subtypes.
AID1345154Rat 5-HT6 receptor (5-Hydroxytryptamine receptors)1998Journal of neurochemistry, Nov, Volume: 71, Issue:5
Identification of residues in transmembrane regions III and VI that contribute to the ligand binding site of the serotonin 5-HT6 receptor.
AID1345783Rat D2 receptor (Dopamine receptors)1990Nature, Sep-13, Volume: 347, Issue:6289
Molecular cloning and characterization of a novel dopamine receptor (D3) as a target for neuroleptics.
AID1345833Human D3 receptor (Dopamine receptors)1995Neuroreport, Jan-26, Volume: 6, Issue:2
A functional test identifies dopamine agonists selective for D3 versus D2 receptors.
AID1345898Rat D3 receptor (Dopamine receptors)1990Nature, Sep-13, Volume: 347, Issue:6289
Molecular cloning and characterization of a novel dopamine receptor (D3) as a target for neuroleptics.
AID1345814Human D4 receptor (Dopamine receptors)2002The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics, Nov, Volume: 303, Issue:2
Differential actions of antiparkinson agents at multiple classes of monoaminergic receptor. I. A multivariate analysis of the binding profiles of 14 drugs at 21 native and cloned human receptor subtypes.
AID1346049Human alpha2A-adrenoceptor (Adrenoceptors)2002The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics, Nov, Volume: 303, Issue:2
Differential actions of antiparkinson agents at multiple classes of monoaminergic receptor. I. A multivariate analysis of the binding profiles of 14 drugs at 21 native and cloned human receptor subtypes.
AID1346058Human alpha2B-adrenoceptor (Adrenoceptors)2002The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics, Nov, Volume: 303, Issue:2
Differential actions of antiparkinson agents at multiple classes of monoaminergic receptor. I. A multivariate analysis of the binding profiles of 14 drugs at 21 native and cloned human receptor subtypes.
AID1345718Human D1 receptor (Dopamine receptors)1991Nature, Apr-18, Volume: 350, Issue:6319
Cloning of the gene for a human dopamine D5 receptor with higher affinity for dopamine than D1.
AID1345879Human D5 receptor (Dopamine receptors)1991Nature, Apr-18, Volume: 350, Issue:6319
Cloning of the gene for a human dopamine D5 receptor with higher affinity for dopamine than D1.
AID1345615Human 5-HT1A receptor (5-Hydroxytryptamine receptors)2002The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics, Nov, Volume: 303, Issue:2
Differential actions of antiparkinson agents at multiple classes of monoaminergic receptor. I. A multivariate analysis of the binding profiles of 14 drugs at 21 native and cloned human receptor subtypes.
AID1345833Human D3 receptor (Dopamine receptors)1994The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics, Jan, Volume: 268, Issue:1
Expression and pharmacological characterization of the human D3 dopamine receptor.
AID1346264Human 5-HT1B receptor (5-Hydroxytryptamine receptors)2002The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics, Nov, Volume: 303, Issue:2
Differential actions of antiparkinson agents at multiple classes of monoaminergic receptor. I. A multivariate analysis of the binding profiles of 14 drugs at 21 native and cloned human receptor subtypes.
AID624218Antagonists at Human 5-Hydroxytryptamine receptor 5-HT2B2002The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics, Nov, Volume: 303, Issue:2
Differential actions of antiparkinson agents at multiple classes of monoaminergic receptor. I. A multivariate analysis of the binding profiles of 14 drugs at 21 native and cloned human receptor subtypes.
AID1346893Human 5-HT2C receptor (5-Hydroxytryptamine receptors)2002The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics, Nov, Volume: 303, Issue:2
Differential actions of antiparkinson agents at multiple classes of monoaminergic receptor. I. A multivariate analysis of the binding profiles of 14 drugs at 21 native and cloned human receptor subtypes.
AID1259419Human 5-HT2A receptor (5-Hydroxytryptamine receptors)2002The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics, Nov, Volume: 303, Issue:2
Differential actions of antiparkinson agents at multiple classes of monoaminergic receptor. I. A multivariate analysis of the binding profiles of 14 drugs at 21 native and cloned human receptor subtypes.
AID624216Agonists at Human 5-Hydroxytryptamine receptor 5-HT2C2002The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics, Nov, Volume: 303, Issue:2
Differential actions of antiparkinson agents at multiple classes of monoaminergic receptor. I. A multivariate analysis of the binding profiles of 14 drugs at 21 native and cloned human receptor subtypes.
AID1345170Human 5-HT6 receptor (5-Hydroxytryptamine receptors)1996Journal of neurochemistry, Jan, Volume: 66, Issue:1
Cloning, characterization, and chromosomal localization of a human 5-HT6 serotonin receptor.
AID1345788Human D2 receptor (Dopamine receptors)2002The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics, Nov, Volume: 303, Issue:2
Differential actions of antiparkinson agents at multiple classes of monoaminergic receptor. I. A multivariate analysis of the binding profiles of 14 drugs at 21 native and cloned human receptor subtypes.
AID1345788Human D2 receptor (Dopamine receptors)1995Neuroreport, Jan-26, Volume: 6, Issue:2
A functional test identifies dopamine agonists selective for D3 versus D2 receptors.
AID1346867Human 5-HT2B receptor (5-Hydroxytryptamine receptors)2002The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics, Nov, Volume: 303, Issue:2
Differential actions of antiparkinson agents at multiple classes of monoaminergic receptor. I. A multivariate analysis of the binding profiles of 14 drugs at 21 native and cloned human receptor subtypes.
AID1346159Human alpha2C-adrenoceptor (Adrenoceptors)2002The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics, Nov, Volume: 303, Issue:2
Differential actions of antiparkinson agents at multiple classes of monoaminergic receptor. I. A multivariate analysis of the binding profiles of 14 drugs at 21 native and cloned human receptor subtypes.
AID1345788Human D2 receptor (Dopamine receptors)1994The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics, Jan, Volume: 268, Issue:1
Expression and pharmacological characterization of the human D3 dopamine receptor.
AID1347058CD47-SIRPalpha protein protein interaction - HTRF assay qHTS validation2019PloS one, , Volume: 14, Issue:7
Quantitative high-throughput screening assays for the discovery and development of SIRPα-CD47 interaction inhibitors.
AID1347410qHTS for inhibitors of adenylyl cyclases using a fission yeast platform: a pilot screen against the NCATS LOPAC library2019Cellular signalling, 08, Volume: 60A fission yeast platform for heterologous expression of mammalian adenylyl cyclases and high throughput screening.
AID588349qHTS for Inhibitors of ATXN expression: Validation of Cytotoxic Assay
AID504810Antagonists of the Thyroid Stimulating Hormone Receptor: HTS campaign2010Endocrinology, Jul, Volume: 151, Issue:7
A small molecule inverse agonist for the human thyroid-stimulating hormone receptor.
AID1347151Optimization of GU AMC qHTS for Zika virus inhibitors: Unlinked NS2B-NS3 protease assay2020Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 12-08, Volume: 117, Issue:49
Therapeutic candidates for the Zika virus identified by a high-throughput screen for Zika protease inhibitors.
AID504812Inverse Agonists of the Thyroid Stimulating Hormone Receptor: HTS campaign2010Endocrinology, Jul, Volume: 151, Issue:7
A small molecule inverse agonist for the human thyroid-stimulating hormone receptor.
AID1347152Confirmatory screen NINDS AMC qHTS for Zika virus inhibitors2020Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 12-08, Volume: 117, Issue:49
Therapeutic candidates for the Zika virus identified by a high-throughput screen for Zika protease inhibitors.
AID1347161Confirmatory screen NINDS Rhodamine qHTS for Zika virus inhibitors2020Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 12-08, Volume: 117, Issue:49
Therapeutic candidates for the Zika virus identified by a high-throughput screen for Zika protease inhibitors.
AID1347153Confirmatory screen GU AMC qHTS for Zika virus inhibitors2020Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 12-08, Volume: 117, Issue:49
Therapeutic candidates for the Zika virus identified by a high-throughput screen for Zika protease inhibitors.
AID1347086qHTS for Inhibitors of the Functional Ribonucleoprotein Complex (vRNP) of Lymphocytic Choriomeningitis Arenaviruses (LCMV): LCMV Primary Screen - GLuc reporter signal2020Antiviral research, 01, Volume: 173A cell-based, infectious-free, platform to identify inhibitors of lassa virus ribonucleoprotein (vRNP) activity.
AID1347049Natriuretic polypeptide receptor (hNpr1) antagonism - Pilot screen2019Science translational medicine, 07-10, Volume: 11, Issue:500
Inhibition of natriuretic peptide receptor 1 reduces itch in mice.
AID1508630Primary qHTS for small molecule stabilizers of the endoplasmic reticulum resident proteome: Secreted ER Calcium Modulated Protein (SERCaMP) assay2021Cell reports, 04-27, Volume: 35, Issue:4
A target-agnostic screen identifies approved drugs to stabilize the endoplasmic reticulum-resident proteome.
AID1347050Natriuretic polypeptide receptor (hNpr2) antagonism - Pilot subtype selectivity assay2019Science translational medicine, 07-10, Volume: 11, Issue:500
Inhibition of natriuretic peptide receptor 1 reduces itch in mice.
AID1347045Natriuretic polypeptide receptor (hNpr1) antagonism - Pilot counterscreen GloSensor control cell line2019Science translational medicine, 07-10, Volume: 11, Issue:500
Inhibition of natriuretic peptide receptor 1 reduces itch in mice.
AID1347082qHTS for Inhibitors of the Functional Ribonucleoprotein Complex (vRNP) of Lassa (LASV) Arenavirus: LASV Primary Screen - GLuc reporter signal2020Antiviral research, 01, Volume: 173A cell-based, infectious-free, platform to identify inhibitors of lassa virus ribonucleoprotein (vRNP) activity.
AID1347149Furin counterscreen qHTS for Zika virus inhibitors2020Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 12-08, Volume: 117, Issue:49
Therapeutic candidates for the Zika virus identified by a high-throughput screen for Zika protease inhibitors.
AID504836Inducers of the Endoplasmic Reticulum Stress Response (ERSR) in human glioma: Validation2002The Journal of biological chemistry, Apr-19, Volume: 277, Issue:16
Sustained ER Ca2+ depletion suppresses protein synthesis and induces activation-enhanced cell death in mast cells.
AID1347083qHTS for Inhibitors of the Functional Ribonucleoprotein Complex (vRNP) of Lassa (LASV) Arenavirus: Viability assay - alamar blue signal for LASV Primary Screen2020Antiviral research, 01, Volume: 173A cell-based, infectious-free, platform to identify inhibitors of lassa virus ribonucleoprotein (vRNP) activity.
AID1347059CD47-SIRPalpha protein protein interaction - Alpha assay qHTS validation2019PloS one, , Volume: 14, Issue:7
Quantitative high-throughput screening assays for the discovery and development of SIRPα-CD47 interaction inhibitors.
AID588378qHTS for Inhibitors of ATXN expression: Validation
AID1347168HepG2 cells viability qHTS for Zika virus inhibitors2020Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 12-08, Volume: 117, Issue:49
Therapeutic candidates for the Zika virus identified by a high-throughput screen for Zika protease inhibitors.
AID1347405qHTS to identify inhibitors of the type 1 interferon - major histocompatibility complex class I in skeletal muscle: primary screen against the NCATS LOPAC collection2020ACS chemical biology, 07-17, Volume: 15, Issue:7
High-Throughput Screening to Identify Inhibitors of the Type I Interferon-Major Histocompatibility Complex Class I Pathway in Skeletal Muscle.
AID1347057CD47-SIRPalpha protein protein interaction - LANCE assay qHTS validation2019PloS one, , Volume: 14, Issue:7
Quantitative high-throughput screening assays for the discovery and development of SIRPα-CD47 interaction inhibitors.
AID1347167Vero cells viability qHTS for Zika virus inhibitors2020Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 12-08, Volume: 117, Issue:49
Therapeutic candidates for the Zika virus identified by a high-throughput screen for Zika protease inhibitors.
AID1347169Tertiary RLuc qRT-PCR qHTS assay for Zika virus inhibitors2020Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 12-08, Volume: 117, Issue:49
Therapeutic candidates for the Zika virus identified by a high-throughput screen for Zika protease inhibitors.
AID64925In vitro affinity at wild type Dopamine receptor D2 on C6 (glioma) cell membranes.2000Journal of medicinal chemistry, Aug-10, Volume: 43, Issue:16
CoMFA-based prediction of agonist affinities at recombinant wild type versus serine to alanine point mutated D2 dopamine receptors.
AID681137TP_TRANSPORTER: increase in Calcein-AM intracellular accumulation in mdr1a-expressing LLC-PK1 cells2002The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics, Oct, Volume: 303, Issue:1
Interaction of cytochrome P450 3A inhibitors with P-glycoprotein.
AID1079944Benign tumor, proven histopathologically. Value is number of references indexed. [column 'T.BEN' in source]
AID1599374Antiviral activity against DENV1 02-20 infected in African green monkey Vero cells after 3 days by focus reduction assay2019European journal of medicinal chemistry, Aug-15, Volume: 176Recent update on anti-dengue drug discovery.
AID1079935Cytolytic liver toxicity, either proven histopathologically or where the ratio of maximal ALT or AST activity above normal to that of Alkaline Phosphatase is > 5 (see ACUTE). Value is number of references indexed. [column 'CYTOL' in source]
AID496827Antimicrobial activity against Leishmania amazonensis2010Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry, Mar-15, Volume: 18, Issue:6
Multi-target spectral moment QSAR versus ANN for antiparasitic drugs against different parasite species.
AID521215Antiproliferative activity against mouse neural precursor cells by colony formation assay2007Nature chemical biology, May, Volume: 3, Issue:5
Chemical genetics reveals a complex functional ground state of neural stem cells.
AID1079932Highest frequency of moderate liver toxicity observed during clinical trials, expressed as a percentage. [column '% BIOL' in source]
AID64917In vitro affinity at mutant D2 receptor (S194A) in C6 (glioma) cell membranes.2000Journal of medicinal chemistry, Aug-10, Volume: 43, Issue:16
CoMFA-based prediction of agonist affinities at recombinant wild type versus serine to alanine point mutated D2 dopamine receptors.
AID33113In vitro affinity for alpha adrenergic receptor by displacement of 3[H]clonidine in calf cerebral cortex1983Journal of medicinal chemistry, Mar, Volume: 26, Issue:3
Synthesis of (7R)-7H-indolo[3,4-gh][1,4]benzoxazines, a new class of D-heteroergolines with dopamine agonist activity.
AID496831Antimicrobial activity against Cryptosporidium parvum2010Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry, Mar-15, Volume: 18, Issue:6
Multi-target spectral moment QSAR versus ANN for antiparasitic drugs against different parasite species.
AID1664755Inhibition of recombinant human GALNS expressed in Pichia pastoris at 0.001 to 50 uM using 4MUGPS as substrate incubated for 18 hrs by fluorescence assay relative to control2020ACS medicinal chemistry letters, Jul-09, Volume: 11, Issue:7
Bromocriptine as a Novel Pharmacological Chaperone for Mucopolysaccharidosis IV A.
AID1079943Malignant tumor, proven histopathologically. Value is number of references indexed. [column 'T.MAL' in source]
AID62862In vitro affinity for dopamine receptor by displacement of [3H]- apomorphine in rat striatal membranes1983Journal of medicinal chemistry, Mar, Volume: 26, Issue:3
Synthesis of (7R)-7H-indolo[3,4-gh][1,4]benzoxazines, a new class of D-heteroergolines with dopamine agonist activity.
AID1659178Inhibition of Zika virus NS2B-NS3 protease by cell based assay2020Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, 03-01, Volume: 30, Issue:5
Inhibitors of the Zika virus protease NS2B-NS3.
AID185482Dopaminergic activity, ability to lower serum prolactin levels after intraperitoneal administration of compound (0.001 mg/kg) in rats1986Journal of medicinal chemistry, Jun, Volume: 29, Issue:6
Synthesis and dopaminergic activity of trans-6-methyl-7a,8,9,10,11,11a-hexahydro-7H-pyrrolo[3,2,1-gh]- 4,7-phenanthroline and trans-1,2,3,4,4a,5,6,10b-octahydro-4,7-phenanthroline derivatives.
AID183047Compound was tested for the percent prolactin inhibiting activity at the 0.01 mg/kg dose levels1986Journal of medicinal chemistry, Jun, Volume: 29, Issue:6
Synthesis and dopaminergic activity of trans-6-methyl-7a,8,9,10,11,11a-hexahydro-7H-pyrrolo[3,2,1-gh]- 4,7-phenanthroline and trans-1,2,3,4,4a,5,6,10b-octahydro-4,7-phenanthroline derivatives.
AID496820Antimicrobial activity against Trypanosoma brucei2010Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry, Mar-15, Volume: 18, Issue:6
Multi-target spectral moment QSAR versus ANN for antiparasitic drugs against different parasite species.
AID1599377Antiviral activity against DENV4 09-48 infected in African green monkey Vero cells after 3 days by focus reduction assay2019European journal of medicinal chemistry, Aug-15, Volume: 176Recent update on anti-dengue drug discovery.
AID625289Drug Induced Liver Injury Prediction System (DILIps) training set; hepatic side effect (HepSE) score for liver disease2011PLoS computational biology, Dec, Volume: 7, Issue:12
Translating clinical findings into knowledge in drug safety evaluation--drug induced liver injury prediction system (DILIps).
AID1079941Liver damage due to vascular disease: peliosis hepatitis, hepatic veno-occlusive disease, Budd-Chiari syndrome. Value is number of references indexed. [column 'VASC' in source]
AID1079939Cirrhosis, proven histopathologically. Value is number of references indexed. [column 'CIRRH' in source]
AID311524Oral bioavailability in human2007Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry, Dec-15, Volume: 15, Issue:24
Hologram QSAR model for the prediction of human oral bioavailability.
AID588216FDA HLAED, serum glutamic oxaloacetic transaminase (SGOT) increase2004Current drug discovery technologies, Dec, Volume: 1, Issue:4
Assessment of the health effects of chemicals in humans: II. Construction of an adverse effects database for QSAR modeling.
AID625281Drug Induced Liver Injury Prediction System (DILIps) training set; hepatic side effect (HepSE) score for cholelithiasis2011PLoS computational biology, Dec, Volume: 7, Issue:12
Translating clinical findings into knowledge in drug safety evaluation--drug induced liver injury prediction system (DILIps).
AID183046Compound was tested for the percent prolactin inhibiting activity at the 0.001 mg/kg dose levels1986Journal of medicinal chemistry, Jun, Volume: 29, Issue:6
Synthesis and dopaminergic activity of trans-6-methyl-7a,8,9,10,11,11a-hexahydro-7H-pyrrolo[3,2,1-gh]- 4,7-phenanthroline and trans-1,2,3,4,4a,5,6,10b-octahydro-4,7-phenanthroline derivatives.
AID681116TP_TRANSPORTER: transepithelial transport (basal to apical) in MDR1-expressing MDCKII cells2002The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics, Dec, Volume: 303, Issue:3
Passive permeability and P-glycoprotein-mediated efflux differentiate central nervous system (CNS) and non-CNS marketed drugs.
AID496832Antimicrobial activity against Trypanosoma brucei rhodesiense2010Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry, Mar-15, Volume: 18, Issue:6
Multi-target spectral moment QSAR versus ANN for antiparasitic drugs against different parasite species.
AID1664767Total plasma concentration in parkinson's disease patients2020ACS medicinal chemistry letters, Jul-09, Volume: 11, Issue:7
Bromocriptine as a Novel Pharmacological Chaperone for Mucopolysaccharidosis IV A.
AID175136Duration of activity was determined1984Journal of medicinal chemistry, Jul, Volume: 27, Issue:7
Troponoids. 6. Troponylpiperazines: a new class of dopamine agonists.
AID1154610Displacement of [125]iodosulpride from human recombinant dopamine D2L receptor expressed in CHO cells after 30 mins2014Journal of medicinal chemistry, Jul-10, Volume: 57, Issue:13
Novel aza-analogous ergoline derived scaffolds as potent serotonin 5-HT₆ and dopamine D₂ receptor ligands.
AID588215FDA HLAED, alkaline phosphatase increase2004Current drug discovery technologies, Dec, Volume: 1, Issue:4
Assessment of the health effects of chemicals in humans: II. Construction of an adverse effects database for QSAR modeling.
AID485979Inhibition of CETP in rabbit serum at 10 uM after 1 hr by fluorescent cholesteryl esters transfer assay2010European journal of medicinal chemistry, Apr, Volume: 45, Issue:4
Discovery of new cholesteryl ester transfer protein inhibitors via ligand-based pharmacophore modeling and QSAR analysis followed by synthetic exploration.
AID588219FDA HLAED, gamma-glutamyl transferase (GGT) increase2004Current drug discovery technologies, Dec, Volume: 1, Issue:4
Assessment of the health effects of chemicals in humans: II. Construction of an adverse effects database for QSAR modeling.
AID4447Binding affinity towards Serotonin 5-hydroxytryptamine 1A receptor by displacement of [3H]-(+)-8-OH-DPAT.1997Journal of medicinal chemistry, Feb-28, Volume: 40, Issue:5
Synthesis and biological activities of (R)-5,6-dihydro-N,N-dimethyl-4H-imidazo[4,5,1-ij]quinolin-5-amine and its metabolites.
AID681138TP_TRANSPORTER: increase in Calcein-AM intracellular accumulation in mdr1b-expressing LLC-PK1 cells2002The Journal of pharmacology and experimental therapeutics, Oct, Volume: 303, Issue:1
Interaction of cytochrome P450 3A inhibitors with P-glycoprotein.
AID625288Drug Induced Liver Injury Prediction System (DILIps) training set; hepatic side effect (HepSE) score for jaundice2011PLoS computational biology, Dec, Volume: 7, Issue:12
Translating clinical findings into knowledge in drug safety evaluation--drug induced liver injury prediction system (DILIps).
AID174967Antagonized affect on the accumulation of the brain dopamine induced by butyrolactone (GBL) at 10 mg/kg after intraperitoneal administration1986Journal of medicinal chemistry, Sep, Volume: 29, Issue:9
(5-Amino-1,3-dimethyl-1H-pyrazol-4-yl)(2-fluorophenyl)methanones . A series of novel potential antipsychotic agents.
AID625283Drug Induced Liver Injury Prediction System (DILIps) training set; hepatic side effect (HepSE) score for elevated liver function tests2011PLoS computational biology, Dec, Volume: 7, Issue:12
Translating clinical findings into knowledge in drug safety evaluation--drug induced liver injury prediction system (DILIps).
AID681142TP_TRANSPORTER: increase in Vinblastine intracellular accumulation in MDR1-expressing LLC-PK1 cells2002Molecular pharmacology, May, Volume: 61, Issue:5
Three-dimensional quantitative structure-activity relationships of inhibitors of P-glycoprotein.
AID185485Dopaminergic activity, ability to lower serum prolactin levels after intraperitoneal administration of compound (0.1 mg/kg) in rats1986Journal of medicinal chemistry, Jun, Volume: 29, Issue:6
Synthesis and dopaminergic activity of trans-6-methyl-7a,8,9,10,11,11a-hexahydro-7H-pyrrolo[3,2,1-gh]- 4,7-phenanthroline and trans-1,2,3,4,4a,5,6,10b-octahydro-4,7-phenanthroline derivatives.
AID1220555Fraction unbound in Sprague-Dawley rat brain homogenates at 1 uM after 6 hrs by equilibrium dialysis method2011Drug metabolism and disposition: the biological fate of chemicals, Jul, Volume: 39, Issue:7
Species independence in brain tissue binding using brain homogenates.
AID112957Compound was tested for its ability to antagonize the catalepsy produced in mice after sc administration1986Journal of medicinal chemistry, May, Volume: 29, Issue:5
Drug design via pharmacophore identification. Dopaminergic activity of 3H-benz[e]indol-8-amines and their mode of interaction with the dopamine receptor.
AID625284Drug Induced Liver Injury Prediction System (DILIps) training set; hepatic side effect (HepSE) score for hepatic failure2011PLoS computational biology, Dec, Volume: 7, Issue:12
Translating clinical findings into knowledge in drug safety evaluation--drug induced liver injury prediction system (DILIps).
AID625291Drug Induced Liver Injury Prediction System (DILIps) training set; hepatic side effect (HepSE) score for liver function tests abnormal2011PLoS computational biology, Dec, Volume: 7, Issue:12
Translating clinical findings into knowledge in drug safety evaluation--drug induced liver injury prediction system (DILIps).
AID625287Drug Induced Liver Injury Prediction System (DILIps) training set; hepatic side effect (HepSE) score for hepatomegaly2011PLoS computational biology, Dec, Volume: 7, Issue:12
Translating clinical findings into knowledge in drug safety evaluation--drug induced liver injury prediction system (DILIps).
AID496817Antimicrobial activity against Trypanosoma cruzi2010Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry, Mar-15, Volume: 18, Issue:6
Multi-target spectral moment QSAR versus ANN for antiparasitic drugs against different parasite species.
AID1220558Fraction unbound in Beagle dog brain homogenates at 1 uM after 6 hrs by equilibrium dialysis method2011Drug metabolism and disposition: the biological fate of chemicals, Jul, Volume: 39, Issue:7
Species independence in brain tissue binding using brain homogenates.
AID1664761Chaperone activity at GALNS p.R61W/p.W405_T406 deletion mutant in mucopolysaccharidosis IVA patient-derived fibroblasts GM01361 assessed as enzyme activity using 4MUGPS as substrate at 1 to 10 uM incubated for 48 hrs by fluorescence assay2020ACS medicinal chemistry letters, Jul-09, Volume: 11, Issue:7
Bromocriptine as a Novel Pharmacological Chaperone for Mucopolysaccharidosis IV A.
AID1659175Inhibition of Zika virus NS2B-NS3 protease2020Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, 03-01, Volume: 30, Issue:5
Inhibitors of the Zika virus protease NS2B-NS3.
AID1664763Chaperone activity at GALNS p.R386C/p.F285 deletion mutant in mucopolysaccharidosis IVA patient-derived fibroblasts GM00593 assessed as reduction in lysosomal mass by measuring mean fluorescence intensity at 1 uM incubated for 36 hrs by deep red Lysotrack2020ACS medicinal chemistry letters, Jul-09, Volume: 11, Issue:7
Bromocriptine as a Novel Pharmacological Chaperone for Mucopolysaccharidosis IV A.
AID183048Compound was tested for the percent prolactin inhibiting activity at the 0.1 mg/kg dose levels1986Journal of medicinal chemistry, Jun, Volume: 29, Issue:6
Synthesis and dopaminergic activity of trans-6-methyl-7a,8,9,10,11,11a-hexahydro-7H-pyrrolo[3,2,1-gh]- 4,7-phenanthroline and trans-1,2,3,4,4a,5,6,10b-octahydro-4,7-phenanthroline derivatives.
AID496829Antimicrobial activity against Leishmania infantum2010Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry, Mar-15, Volume: 18, Issue:6
Multi-target spectral moment QSAR versus ANN for antiparasitic drugs against different parasite species.
AID588214FDA HLAED, liver enzyme composite activity2004Current drug discovery technologies, Dec, Volume: 1, Issue:4
Assessment of the health effects of chemicals in humans: II. Construction of an adverse effects database for QSAR modeling.
AID428564Inhibition of CYP3A42009European journal of medicinal chemistry, Jul, Volume: 44, Issue:7
Comparative chemometric modeling of cytochrome 3A4 inhibitory activity of structurally diverse compounds using stepwise MLR, FA-MLR, PLS, GFA, G/PLS and ANN techniques.
AID588218FDA HLAED, lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) increase2004Current drug discovery technologies, Dec, Volume: 1, Issue:4
Assessment of the health effects of chemicals in humans: II. Construction of an adverse effects database for QSAR modeling.
AID169202Contralateral turning characteristic was measured in rat at 5 po mg/kg dose1986Journal of medicinal chemistry, May, Volume: 29, Issue:5
Drug design via pharmacophore identification. Dopaminergic activity of 3H-benz[e]indol-8-amines and their mode of interaction with the dopamine receptor.
AID1220554Fraction unbound in Wistar Han rat brain homogenates at 1 uM after 6 hrs by equilibrium dialysis method2011Drug metabolism and disposition: the biological fate of chemicals, Jul, Volume: 39, Issue:7
Species independence in brain tissue binding using brain homogenates.
AID496830Antimicrobial activity against Leishmania major2010Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry, Mar-15, Volume: 18, Issue:6
Multi-target spectral moment QSAR versus ANN for antiparasitic drugs against different parasite species.
AID1079936Choleostatic liver toxicity, either proven histopathologically or where the ratio of maximal ALT or AST activity above normal to that of Alkaline Phosphatase is < 2 (see ACUTE). Value is number of references indexed. [column 'CHOLE' in source]
AID1664764Chaperone activity at GALNS p.R386C/p.F285 deletion mutant in mucopolysaccharidosis IVA patient-derived fibroblasts GM00593 assessed as reduction in lysosomal mass by measuring mean fluorescence intensity at 10 uM incubated for 36 hrs by deep red Lysotrac2020ACS medicinal chemistry letters, Jul-09, Volume: 11, Issue:7
Bromocriptine as a Novel Pharmacological Chaperone for Mucopolysaccharidosis IV A.
AID521219Antiproliferative activity against mouse neural precursor cells by colony formation assay in presence of D2 receptor antagonist sulpride 2007Nature chemical biology, May, Volume: 3, Issue:5
Chemical genetics reveals a complex functional ground state of neural stem cells.
AID588211Literature-mined compound from Fourches et al multi-species drug-induced liver injury (DILI) dataset, effect in humans2010Chemical research in toxicology, Jan, Volume: 23, Issue:1
Cheminformatics analysis of assertions mined from literature that describe drug-induced liver injury in different species.
AID1664765Chaperone activity at GALNS p.R61W/p.W405_T406 deletion mutant in mucopolysaccharidosis IVA patient-derived fibroblasts GM01361 assessed as reduction in lysosomal mass by measuring mean fluorescence intensity at 0.01 uM incubated for 36 hrs by deep red Ly2020ACS medicinal chemistry letters, Jul-09, Volume: 11, Issue:7
Bromocriptine as a Novel Pharmacological Chaperone for Mucopolysaccharidosis IV A.
AID1664758Chaperone activity at GALNS p.A393S mutant in mucopolysaccharidosis IVA patient-derived fibroblasts GM00958 assessed as enzyme activity using 4MUGPS as substrate at 0.001 to 10 uM incubated for 48 hrs by fluorescence assay2020ACS medicinal chemistry letters, Jul-09, Volume: 11, Issue:7
Bromocriptine as a Novel Pharmacological Chaperone for Mucopolysaccharidosis IV A.
AID1079933Acute liver toxicity defined via clinical observations and clear clinical-chemistry results: serum ALT or AST activity > 6 N or serum alkaline phosphatases activity > 1.7 N. This category includes cytolytic, choleostatic and mixed liver toxicity. Value is
AID681143TP_TRANSPORTER: increase in Calcein-AM intracellular accumulation in MDR1-expressing LLC-PK1 cells2002Molecular pharmacology, May, Volume: 61, Issue:5
Three-dimensional quantitative structure-activity relationships of inhibitors of P-glycoprotein.
AID496821Antimicrobial activity against Leishmania2010Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry, Mar-15, Volume: 18, Issue:6
Multi-target spectral moment QSAR versus ANN for antiparasitic drugs against different parasite species.
AID1474167Liver toxicity in human assessed as induction of drug-induced liver injury by measuring verified drug-induced liver injury concern status2016Drug discovery today, Apr, Volume: 21, Issue:4
DILIrank: the largest reference drug list ranked by the risk for developing drug-induced liver injury in humans.
AID567091Drug absorption in human assessed as human intestinal absorption rate2011European journal of medicinal chemistry, Jan, Volume: 46, Issue:1
Prediction of drug intestinal absorption by new linear and non-linear QSPR.
AID1695731Inhibition of alpha-synuclein fibril formation (unknown origin) incubated for 6 days by thioflavin S based fluorescence assay2019European journal of medicinal chemistry, Apr-01, Volume: 167Toward the discovery and development of effective modulators of α-synuclein amyloid aggregation.
AID625286Drug Induced Liver Injury Prediction System (DILIps) training set; hepatic side effect (HepSE) score for hepatitis2011PLoS computational biology, Dec, Volume: 7, Issue:12
Translating clinical findings into knowledge in drug safety evaluation--drug induced liver injury prediction system (DILIps).
AID588217FDA HLAED, serum glutamic pyruvic transaminase (SGPT) increase2004Current drug discovery technologies, Dec, Volume: 1, Issue:4
Assessment of the health effects of chemicals in humans: II. Construction of an adverse effects database for QSAR modeling.
AID1474166Liver toxicity in human assessed as induction of drug-induced liver injury by measuring severity class index2016Drug discovery today, Apr, Volume: 21, Issue:4
DILIrank: the largest reference drug list ranked by the risk for developing drug-induced liver injury in humans.
AID1079942Steatosis, proven histopathologically. Value is number of references indexed. [column 'STEAT' in source]
AID1664759Chaperone activity at GALNS p.R386C/p.F285 deletion mutant in mucopolysaccharidosis IVA patient-derived fibroblasts GM00593 assessed as fold increase in enzyme activity using 4MUGPS as substrate at 10 uM incubated for 48 hrs by fluorescence assay relative2020ACS medicinal chemistry letters, Jul-09, Volume: 11, Issue:7
Bromocriptine as a Novel Pharmacological Chaperone for Mucopolysaccharidosis IV A.
AID63977Binding affinity towards Dopamine receptor D2 by displacement of [3H]U-86170.1997Journal of medicinal chemistry, Feb-28, Volume: 40, Issue:5
Synthesis and biological activities of (R)-5,6-dihydro-N,N-dimethyl-4H-imidazo[4,5,1-ij]quinolin-5-amine and its metabolites.
AID588212Literature-mined compound from Fourches et al multi-species drug-induced liver injury (DILI) dataset, effect in rodents2010Chemical research in toxicology, Jan, Volume: 23, Issue:1
Cheminformatics analysis of assertions mined from literature that describe drug-induced liver injury in different species.
AID172470Compound was evaluated for its ability to induce locomotion in rats rendered akinetic by bilateral anterolateral hyphalamic injection of 6-OHDA at 10 Po mg/kg dose after sc administration1986Journal of medicinal chemistry, May, Volume: 29, Issue:5
Drug design via pharmacophore identification. Dopaminergic activity of 3H-benz[e]indol-8-amines and their mode of interaction with the dopamine receptor.
AID1079931Moderate liver toxicity, defined via clinical-chemistry results: ALT or AST serum activity 6 times the normal upper limit (N) or alkaline phosphatase serum activity of 1.7 N. Value is number of references indexed. [column 'BIOL' in source]
AID496824Antimicrobial activity against Toxoplasma gondii2010Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry, Mar-15, Volume: 18, Issue:6
Multi-target spectral moment QSAR versus ANN for antiparasitic drugs against different parasite species.
AID1079937Severe hepatitis, defined as possibly life-threatening liver failure or through clinical observations. Value is number of references indexed. [column 'MASS' in source]
AID496823Antimicrobial activity against Trichomonas vaginalis2010Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry, Mar-15, Volume: 18, Issue:6
Multi-target spectral moment QSAR versus ANN for antiparasitic drugs against different parasite species.
AID169866Dopaminergic activity in rats rendered hypokinetic by the bilateral injection of 6-hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA) into the anterolateral hypothalamus at dose of 10 mg/kg sc1986Journal of medicinal chemistry, Feb, Volume: 29, Issue:2
Troponoids. 7. Chemistry and dopamine agonist activity of ciladopa and related aralkyltroponylpiperazines.
AID62729Dopaminergic activity assessed in vitro for displacement of [3H]apomorphine from specific binding sites on rat striatal membranes1984Journal of medicinal chemistry, Dec, Volume: 27, Issue:12
Synthesis of 4-substituted 2H-naphth[1,2-b]-1,4-oxazines, a new class of dopamine agonists.
AID177696In vivo measure of dopaminergic activity by the induction of contralateral turning behavior in 6-hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA) lesioned rats, ip1983Journal of medicinal chemistry, Mar, Volume: 26, Issue:3
Synthesis of (7R)-7H-indolo[3,4-gh][1,4]benzoxazines, a new class of D-heteroergolines with dopamine agonist activity.
AID681496TP_TRANSPORTER: Northern blot from H35 hepatoma cells1997The Journal of biological chemistry, Apr-25, Volume: 272, Issue:17
Bromocriptine transcriptionally activates the multidrug resistance gene (pgp2/mdr1b) by a novel pathway.
AID178770Effective dose which lowered the serum prolactin levels after ip administration in rats1986Journal of medicinal chemistry, Feb, Volume: 29, Issue:2
Troponoids. 7. Chemistry and dopamine agonist activity of ciladopa and related aralkyltroponylpiperazines.
AID588213Literature-mined compound from Fourches et al multi-species drug-induced liver injury (DILI) dataset, effect in non-rodents2010Chemical research in toxicology, Jan, Volume: 23, Issue:1
Cheminformatics analysis of assertions mined from literature that describe drug-induced liver injury in different species.
AID1147971Inhibition of ovum implantation in sc dosed inseminated rat1978Journal of medicinal chemistry, Aug, Volume: 21, Issue:8
Ergot alkaloids. New ergolines as selective dopaminergic stimulants.
AID625292Drug Induced Liver Injury Prediction System (DILIps) training set; hepatic side effect (HepSE) combined score2011PLoS computational biology, Dec, Volume: 7, Issue:12
Translating clinical findings into knowledge in drug safety evaluation--drug induced liver injury prediction system (DILIps).
AID1079940Granulomatous liver disease, proven histopathologically. Value is number of references indexed. [column 'GRAN' in source]
AID1220556Fraction unbound in CD-1 mouse brain homogenates at 1 uM after 6 hrs by equilibrium dialysis method2011Drug metabolism and disposition: the biological fate of chemicals, Jul, Volume: 39, Issue:7
Species independence in brain tissue binding using brain homogenates.
AID1664760Chaperone activity at GALNS p.R61W/p.W405_T406 deletion mutant in mucopolysaccharidosis IVA patient-derived fibroblasts GM01361 assessed as fold increase in enzyme activity using 4MUGPS as substrate at 0.1 uM incubated for 48 hrs by fluorescence assay rel2020ACS medicinal chemistry letters, Jul-09, Volume: 11, Issue:7
Bromocriptine as a Novel Pharmacological Chaperone for Mucopolysaccharidosis IV A.
AID1409748Cmax in human2018ACS medicinal chemistry letters, Mar-08, Volume: 9, Issue:3
Data Sets Representative of the Structures and Experimental Properties of FDA-Approved Drugs.
AID1147968Induction of stereotypy in OFA rat at 30 mg/kg, ip measured every 30 mins for 2 hrs followed by every 60 mins for 7 hrs1978Journal of medicinal chemistry, Aug, Volume: 21, Issue:8
Ergot alkaloids. New ergolines as selective dopaminergic stimulants.
AID1599376Antiviral activity against DENV3 00-40 infected in African green monkey Vero cells after 3 days by focus reduction assay2019European journal of medicinal chemistry, Aug-15, Volume: 176Recent update on anti-dengue drug discovery.
AID496825Antimicrobial activity against Leishmania mexicana2010Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry, Mar-15, Volume: 18, Issue:6
Multi-target spectral moment QSAR versus ANN for antiparasitic drugs against different parasite species.
AID1079949Proposed mechanism(s) of liver damage. [column 'MEC' in source]
AID185483Dopaminergic activity, ability to lower serum prolactin levels after intraperitoneal administration of compound (0.01 mg/kg) in rats1986Journal of medicinal chemistry, Jun, Volume: 29, Issue:6
Synthesis and dopaminergic activity of trans-6-methyl-7a,8,9,10,11,11a-hexahydro-7H-pyrrolo[3,2,1-gh]- 4,7-phenanthroline and trans-1,2,3,4,4a,5,6,10b-octahydro-4,7-phenanthroline derivatives.
AID681490TP_TRANSPORTER: Western blot, H35 hepatoma cells1997The Journal of biological chemistry, Apr-25, Volume: 272, Issue:17
Bromocriptine transcriptionally activates the multidrug resistance gene (pgp2/mdr1b) by a novel pathway.
AID409954Inhibition of mouse brain MAOA2008Journal of medicinal chemistry, Nov-13, Volume: 51, Issue:21
Quantitative structure-activity relationship and complex network approach to monoamine oxidase A and B inhibitors.
AID1079947Comments (NB not yet translated). [column 'COMMENTAIRES' in source]
AID1079934Highest frequency of acute liver toxicity observed during clinical trials, expressed as a percentage. [column '% AIGUE' in source]
AID1608449Inhibition of N-terminal His6-tagged Zika virus NS2B (49 to 95 residues) - NS3 (1 to 170 residues) protease domain expressed in Escherichia coli Bl21(DE3) using Bz-Nle-Lys-Lys-Arg-AMC as substrate preincubated for 10 mins followed by substrate addition me2019European journal of medicinal chemistry, Oct-15, Volume: 180Cell-active carbazole derivatives as inhibitors of the zika virus protease.
AID1220559Fraction unbound in cynomolgus monkey brain homogenates at 1 uM after 6 hrs by equilibrium dialysis method2011Drug metabolism and disposition: the biological fate of chemicals, Jul, Volume: 39, Issue:7
Species independence in brain tissue binding using brain homogenates.
AID1147970Inhibition of serum prolactin in sc dosed rat after 4 hrs by RIA1978Journal of medicinal chemistry, Aug, Volume: 21, Issue:8
Ergot alkaloids. New ergolines as selective dopaminergic stimulants.
AID625290Drug Induced Liver Injury Prediction System (DILIps) training set; hepatic side effect (HepSE) score for liver fatty2011PLoS computational biology, Dec, Volume: 7, Issue:12
Translating clinical findings into knowledge in drug safety evaluation--drug induced liver injury prediction system (DILIps).
AID625280Drug Induced Liver Injury Prediction System (DILIps) training set; hepatic side effect (HepSE) score for cholecystitis2011PLoS computational biology, Dec, Volume: 7, Issue:12
Translating clinical findings into knowledge in drug safety evaluation--drug induced liver injury prediction system (DILIps).
AID64790In vitro affinity at mutant D2 receptor (S194A) in C6 (glioma) cell membranes.2000Journal of medicinal chemistry, Aug-10, Volume: 43, Issue:16
CoMFA-based prediction of agonist affinities at recombinant wild type versus serine to alanine point mutated D2 dopamine receptors.
AID1220557Fraction unbound in Hartley guinea pig brain homogenates at 1 uM after 6 hrs by equilibrium dialysis method2011Drug metabolism and disposition: the biological fate of chemicals, Jul, Volume: 39, Issue:7
Species independence in brain tissue binding using brain homogenates.
AID1079948Times to onset, minimal and maximal, observed in the indexed observations. [column 'DELAI' in source]
AID178771Effective dose which lowered the serum prolactin levels after po administration in rats1986Journal of medicinal chemistry, Feb, Volume: 29, Issue:2
Troponoids. 7. Chemistry and dopamine agonist activity of ciladopa and related aralkyltroponylpiperazines.
AID1079938Chronic liver disease either proven histopathologically, or through a chonic elevation of serum amino-transferase activity after 6 months. Value is number of references indexed. [column 'CHRON' in source]
AID1154613Intrinsic activity at human dopamine D2L receptor expressed in CHO cells by [35S]GTPgammaS binding assay2014Journal of medicinal chemistry, Jul-10, Volume: 57, Issue:13
Novel aza-analogous ergoline derived scaffolds as potent serotonin 5-HT₆ and dopamine D₂ receptor ligands.
AID190429Inhibition of the 6-OHDA-induced Hypokinesia in rat, at 10 mg/Kg sc, expressed as cumulative ambulation score1984Journal of medicinal chemistry, Jul, Volume: 27, Issue:7
Troponoids. 6. Troponylpiperazines: a new class of dopamine agonists.
AID625279Drug Induced Liver Injury Prediction System (DILIps) training set; hepatic side effect (HepSE) score for bilirubinemia2011PLoS computational biology, Dec, Volume: 7, Issue:12
Translating clinical findings into knowledge in drug safety evaluation--drug induced liver injury prediction system (DILIps).
AID496818Antimicrobial activity against Trypanosoma brucei brucei2010Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry, Mar-15, Volume: 18, Issue:6
Multi-target spectral moment QSAR versus ANN for antiparasitic drugs against different parasite species.
AID1664766Chaperone activity at GALNS p.R61W/p.W405_T406 deletion mutant in mucopolysaccharidosis patient-derived fibroblasts GM01361 assessed as reduction in lysosomal mass by measuring mean fluorescence intensity at 0.1 uM incubated for 36 hrs by deep red Lysotra2020ACS medicinal chemistry letters, Jul-09, Volume: 11, Issue:7
Bromocriptine as a Novel Pharmacological Chaperone for Mucopolysaccharidosis IV A.
AID186081Max. intensity of rotational behavior in rats with a unilateral 6-OHDA-induced lesion of the nigrostriatal dopamine (DA) pathway at dose of 2.5 mg/kg sc.1986Journal of medicinal chemistry, Feb, Volume: 29, Issue:2
Troponoids. 7. Chemistry and dopamine agonist activity of ciladopa and related aralkyltroponylpiperazines.
AID36797Alpha-2 adrenergic receptor activity assessed in vitro for displacement of [3H]clonidine from specific binding sites on rat striatal membranes1984Journal of medicinal chemistry, Dec, Volume: 27, Issue:12
Synthesis of 4-substituted 2H-naphth[1,2-b]-1,4-oxazines, a new class of dopamine agonists.
AID1664768Protein binding in plasma of parkinson's disease patients2020ACS medicinal chemistry letters, Jul-09, Volume: 11, Issue:7
Bromocriptine as a Novel Pharmacological Chaperone for Mucopolysaccharidosis IV A.
AID1558330Cytotoxicity against African green monkey Vero cells by MTT assay2020Journal of medicinal chemistry, 01-23, Volume: 63, Issue:2
Drugs for the Treatment of Zika Virus Infection.
AID1220560Fraction unbound in human occipital cortex at 1 uM after 6 hrs by equilibrium dialysis method2011Drug metabolism and disposition: the biological fate of chemicals, Jul, Volume: 39, Issue:7
Species independence in brain tissue binding using brain homogenates.
AID1664756Chaperone activity at recombinant human GALNS expressed in HEK293 cells assessed as fold increase in extracellular enzyme activity using 4MUGPS as substrate at 1 uM incubated for 48 hrs by fluorescence assay relative to control2020ACS medicinal chemistry letters, Jul-09, Volume: 11, Issue:7
Bromocriptine as a Novel Pharmacological Chaperone for Mucopolysaccharidosis IV A.
AID178347Determination of ED50 for induction of turning contralateral in 6-hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA) lesioned rats by ip administration1984Journal of medicinal chemistry, Dec, Volume: 27, Issue:12
Synthesis of 4-substituted 2H-naphth[1,2-b]-1,4-oxazines, a new class of dopamine agonists.
AID175173Compound was tested for serum prolactin assay method in rats at 1 mg/kg dose after peroral administration1986Journal of medicinal chemistry, Sep, Volume: 29, Issue:9
(5-Amino-1,3-dimethyl-1H-pyrazol-4-yl)(2-fluorophenyl)methanones . A series of novel potential antipsychotic agents.
AID1558332Inhibition of NS2B-NS3 protease in Zika virus Puerto Rico/PRVABC5 infected in African green monkey Vero cells assessed as antiviral activity by measuring reduction in virus-induced cytopathic effect preincubated with cells for 2 hrs followed by compound w2020Journal of medicinal chemistry, 01-23, Volume: 63, Issue:2
Drugs for the Treatment of Zika Virus Infection.
AID496819Antimicrobial activity against Plasmodium falciparum2010Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry, Mar-15, Volume: 18, Issue:6
Multi-target spectral moment QSAR versus ANN for antiparasitic drugs against different parasite species.
AID1599375Antiviral activity against DENV2 16681 infected in African green monkey Vero cells after 3 days by focus reduction assay2019European journal of medicinal chemistry, Aug-15, Volume: 176Recent update on anti-dengue drug discovery.
AID717844Inhibition of mouse Ido2 transfected in HEK293T cells using L-tryptophan as substrate assessed as kynurenine formation at 20 uM after 45 mins by spectrophotometric analysis relative to control2012Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, Dec-15, Volume: 22, Issue:24
Identification of selective inhibitors of indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase 2.
AID625285Drug Induced Liver Injury Prediction System (DILIps) training set; hepatic side effect (HepSE) score for hepatic necrosis2011PLoS computational biology, Dec, Volume: 7, Issue:12
Translating clinical findings into knowledge in drug safety evaluation--drug induced liver injury prediction system (DILIps).
AID625282Drug Induced Liver Injury Prediction System (DILIps) training set; hepatic side effect (HepSE) score for cirrhosis2011PLoS computational biology, Dec, Volume: 7, Issue:12
Translating clinical findings into knowledge in drug safety evaluation--drug induced liver injury prediction system (DILIps).
AID496828Antimicrobial activity against Leishmania donovani2010Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry, Mar-15, Volume: 18, Issue:6
Multi-target spectral moment QSAR versus ANN for antiparasitic drugs against different parasite species.
AID1079946Presence of at least one case with successful reintroduction. [column 'REINT' in source]
AID1664757Chaperone activity at recombinant human GALNS expressed in HEK293 cells assessed as fold increase in extracellular enzyme activity using 4MUGPS as substrate at 10 uM incubated for 48 hrs by fluorescence assay relative to control2020ACS medicinal chemistry letters, Jul-09, Volume: 11, Issue:7
Bromocriptine as a Novel Pharmacological Chaperone for Mucopolysaccharidosis IV A.
AID64919In vitro affinity at mutant D2 receptor (S197A) in C6 (glioma) cell membranes.2000Journal of medicinal chemistry, Aug-10, Volume: 43, Issue:16
CoMFA-based prediction of agonist affinities at recombinant wild type versus serine to alanine point mutated D2 dopamine receptors.
AID190441Rotational behavior induced by the compound in rats with a unilateral 6-OHDA-induced lesion of the Nigro-striatal dopamine, at 8 mg/Kg sc1984Journal of medicinal chemistry, Jul, Volume: 27, Issue:7
Troponoids. 6. Troponylpiperazines: a new class of dopamine agonists.
AID238747Binding affinity for human 5-hydroxytryptamine 6 receptor2005Journal of medicinal chemistry, Mar-24, Volume: 48, Issue:6
Medicinal chemistry driven approaches toward novel and selective serotonin 5-HT6 receptor ligands.
AID1079945Animal toxicity known. [column 'TOXIC' in source]
AID1664762Chaperone activity at GALNS in human fibroblasts assessed as change in lysosomal mass at 0.01 to 10 uM incubated for 36 hrs by deep red Lysotracker based flow cytometric analysis2020ACS medicinal chemistry letters, Jul-09, Volume: 11, Issue:7
Bromocriptine as a Novel Pharmacological Chaperone for Mucopolysaccharidosis IV A.
AID497005Antimicrobial activity against Pneumocystis carinii2010Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry, Mar-15, Volume: 18, Issue:6
Multi-target spectral moment QSAR versus ANN for antiparasitic drugs against different parasite species.
AID65774Binding affinity towards Dopamine receptor D3 by displacement of [3H](+)-7-OH-DPAT.1997Journal of medicinal chemistry, Feb-28, Volume: 40, Issue:5
Synthesis and biological activities of (R)-5,6-dihydro-N,N-dimethyl-4H-imidazo[4,5,1-ij]quinolin-5-amine and its metabolites.
AID168206Ability to induce contralateral rotational behavior in rats with a unilateral 6-OHDA-induced lesion of the nigrostriatal dopamine (DA) pathway.1986Journal of medicinal chemistry, Feb, Volume: 29, Issue:2
Troponoids. 7. Chemistry and dopamine agonist activity of ciladopa and related aralkyltroponylpiperazines.
AID112342Evaluated for audiogenic seizures in DBA/ 2 mice, in the protection against paroxysimal EEG at an interval of 60 minutes1981Journal of medicinal chemistry, Jul, Volume: 24, Issue:7
Aporphines. 34. (-)-2,10,11-Trihydroxy-N-n-propylnoraporphine, a novel dopaminergic aporphine alkaloid with anticonvulsant activity.
AID496826Antimicrobial activity against Entamoeba histolytica2010Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry, Mar-15, Volume: 18, Issue:6
Multi-target spectral moment QSAR versus ANN for antiparasitic drugs against different parasite species.
AID1508612NCATS Parallel Artificial Membrane Permeability Assay (PAMPA) Profiling2017Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry, 02-01, Volume: 25, Issue:3
Highly predictive and interpretable models for PAMPA permeability.
AID1159607Screen for inhibitors of RMI FANCM (MM2) intereaction2016Journal of biomolecular screening, Jul, Volume: 21, Issue:6
A High-Throughput Screening Strategy to Identify Protein-Protein Interaction Inhibitors That Block the Fanconi Anemia DNA Repair Pathway.
[information is prepared from bioassay data collected from National Library of Medicine (NLM), extracted Dec-2023]

Research

Studies (6,656)

TimeframeStudies, This Drug (%)All Drugs %
pre-19903840 (57.69)18.7374
1990's1571 (23.60)18.2507
2000's686 (10.31)29.6817
2010's447 (6.72)24.3611
2020's112 (1.68)2.80
[information is prepared from research data collected from National Library of Medicine (NLM), extracted Dec-2023]

Market Indicators

Research Demand Index: 98.48

According to the monthly volume, diversity, and competition of internet searches for this compound, as well the volume and growth of publications, there is estimated to be very strong demand-to-supply ratio for research on this compound.

MetricThis Compound (vs All)
Research Demand Index98.48 (24.57)
Research Supply Index8.97 (2.92)
Research Growth Index4.25 (4.65)
Search Engine Demand Index185.21 (26.88)
Search Engine Supply Index2.00 (0.95)

This Compound (98.48)

All Compounds (24.57)

Study Types

Publication TypeThis drug (%)All Drugs (%)
Trials727 (10.21%)5.53%
Reviews588 (8.26%)6.00%
Case Studies1,136 (15.95%)4.05%
Observational6 (0.08%)0.25%
Other4,664 (65.50%)84.16%
[information is prepared from research data collected from National Library of Medicine (NLM), extracted Dec-2023]

Clinical Trials (39)

Trial Overview

TrialPhaseEnrollmentStudy TypeStart DateStatus
A Multimodel Examination of Bromocriptine on Homeostatic and Hedonic Mechanisms of Food Intake in Individuals at High Risk for Type 2 Diabetes [NCT05405244]Phase 355 participants (Actual)Interventional2017-09-19Completed
Single Dose Pharmacokinetic Study of CYCLOSET ® 0.8 mg Tablets Following Administration of a Weight-Adjusted Dose in Male and Female Children and Adolescent Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus Subjects VS-PEDS BA-2010-V4 [NCT02078440]Phase 118 participants (Actual)Interventional2014-01-31Completed
A Double-blind, Placebo-controlled, Randomised, Multicenter Trial to Compare the Safety and Efficacy of Oral Administration of Pramipexole up to 4.5mg and Bromocriptine up to 22.5mg Combined With L-dopa in Advanced Parkinson's Disease [NCT02172573]Phase 3315 participants (Actual)Interventional1999-04-30Completed
Toward Understanding Dopamine Receptor Contributions to Prediction Error and Reversal Learning in Anorexia Nervosa [NCT04128683]Early Phase 131 participants (Actual)Interventional2020-10-20Active, not recruiting
Matched Pair, Assessor Blinded, Open Label Clinical Trial to Assess the Ophthalmologic Safety of Long Term Oral Treatment With Pramipexole Compared to Bromocriptine or Other Dopamine Agonists in Patients With Parkinson's Disease [NCT02233023]Phase 4705 participants (Actual)Interventional1998-06-30Completed
Bromocriptine and Insulin Sensitivity in Lean and Obese Subjects [NCT02428946]15 participants (Actual)Interventional2014-10-31Completed
Bromocriptine in the Treatment of Peripartum Cardiomyopathy, A Bayesian Randomized Registry Trial [NCT02590601]Phase 30 participants (Actual)Interventional2017-01-01Withdrawn(stopped due to Not enough patients)
Dopamine Action on Metabolism Depending on Genetic Heterogeneity - a Randomized, Placebo-controlled Double Blind Study [NCT03525002]Phase 2150 participants (Anticipated)Interventional2018-05-03Recruiting
A Phase I/II Evaluation of Bromocriptine, Metoprolol and Tamsulosin Combination Therapy in Eyes With Non-Central Diabetic Macular Edema [NCT03384524]Phase 1/Phase 20 participants (Actual)Interventional2018-03-31Withdrawn(stopped due to withdrawn during planning stages)
A Randomized Open Labelled Placebo Controlled Trial to Study the Efficacy of Bromocriptine in Patients With Hepatic/Cirrhosis Related Parkinsonism [NCT02265484]50 participants (Actual)Interventional2013-11-30Completed
Assessment of Lipid Response to Acute Olanzapine in Healthy Adults [NCT04181385]Phase 2/Phase 315 participants (Anticipated)Interventional2019-01-01Recruiting
Effect of Bromocriptine on Insulin Resistance in Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome - A Pilot Study [NCT02133755]Phase 360 participants (Anticipated)Interventional2014-07-31Not yet recruiting
The Role of Dopamine in Fronto-striatal Activation in Emotional-motivational Pain Processing in Patients With Chronic Pain [NCT04674670]48 participants (Actual)Interventional2021-11-01Completed
Effect of Bromocriptine on LV Function in Women With Peripartum Cardiomyopathy A Randomized, Controlled Clinical Trial to Evaluate the Efficacy and Safety of Bromocriptine for Improvement of Left Ventricular Function of Women With PPCM [NCT00998556]Phase 264 participants (Actual)Interventional2010-06-30Completed
A Randomized, Double-Blind, Parallel-Group Trial to Assess the Efficacy and Safety of Cycloset® Compared With Placebo When Added to Metformin in Patients With Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus [NCT00441363]Phase 366 participants (Actual)Interventional2005-02-28Terminated(stopped due to Failure to Recruit in a Timely manner)
Randomized Evaluation of Bromocriptine In Myocardial Recovery THerapy for Peripartum Cardiomyopathy (REBIRTH) [NCT05180773]Phase 4250 participants (Anticipated)Interventional2022-07-27Recruiting
Study of Mylan Pharmaceuticals Inc. and Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corporation (Parlodel®) 2.5 mg Bromocriptine Mesylate Tablets Following a 10 mg Dose in Healthy Adult Volunteers Under Fed Conditions [NCT00650520]Phase 1119 participants (Actual)Interventional2007-05-31Completed
Satisfaction of Patients With the Chosen Method of Inhibition of Lactation: With the Use of Drugs Lowering the Level of Prolactin or Without the Use of Pharmacological Agents in Postnatal Period, Taking Into Account Individual Conditions [NCT04038749]90 participants (Anticipated)Interventional2019-06-16Recruiting
Study of Mylan Pharmaceuticals Inc. and Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corporation (Parlodel®) 5 mg Bromocriptine Mesylate Capsules Following a 10 mg Dose in Healthy Adult Volunteers Under Fed Conditions [NCT00649168]Phase 1120 participants (Actual)Interventional2007-04-30Completed
Efficacy and Safety of Dexamethasone Prevention for Patients of Ovarian Hyperstimulation Syndrome -- A Prospective, Randomized, Controlled Clinical Trial [NCT02846493]Phase 2200 participants (Anticipated)Interventional2016-08-31Not yet recruiting
A Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled Trial to Assess Safety and Tolerability During Treatment of Type 2 Diabetes (T2DM) With Usual Diabetes Therapy (UDT) and Either Cycloset or Placebo [NCT00377676]Phase 33,095 participants (Actual)Interventional2004-07-31Completed
A Phase III, Double-blind, Placebo-controlled Randomised Trial to Determine the Efficacy and Safety of a Low (50 mg/Day) and High (100 mg/Day) Dose of Safinamide, as add-on Therapy, in Subjects With Early Idiopathic Parkinson's Disease Treated With a Stab [NCT00605683]Phase 3679 participants (Actual)Interventional2007-11-30Completed
Effect of Cycloset on Glycemic Control in Type 2 Diabetic Patients Inadequately Controlled on GLP-1 Analogue Therapy [NCT02299050]Phase 423 participants (Actual)Interventional2014-06-30Completed
A Randomized Single-blind Placebo Controlled Comparative Trial of Pramipexole Tablets and Bromocriptine Tablets in Patients With Parkinson's Disease. [NCT00240409]Phase 3208 participants (Actual)Interventional2003-07-31Completed
Open-label, Flexible-dose Adjunctive Bromocriptine for Patients With Schizophrenia and Impaired Glucose Tolerance [NCT03575000]Phase 420 participants (Anticipated)Interventional2023-11-01Not yet recruiting
[NCT00451672]Phase 425 participants Interventional2007-01-31Recruiting
Therapy With Bromocriptine in Patients With Symptomatic Risperidone-Induced Hyperprolactinemia [NCT00315081]Phase 320 participants Interventional2006-05-31Not yet recruiting
Vaginal Bromocriptine for the Treatment of Adenomyosis [NCT01821001]Phase 11 participants (Actual)Interventional2013-03-31Completed
Effect of Pramipexole and Bromocriptine on Nonmotor Symptoms of Early Parkinson's Disease: Multicenter, Open-label, Parallel, Randomized Study [NCT01673724]Phase 4121 participants (Actual)Interventional2012-02-29Completed
Efficacy of Bromocriptine to Reduce Body Temperature in Febrile Critically-ill Adults With Acute Neurologic Disease: an Open-label, Blinded Endpoint, Randomized Controlled Trial [NCT03496545]Phase 1/Phase 247 participants (Actual)Interventional2018-11-30Completed
Double-Blind Comparative Trial and Open-Label Extension Trial to Investigate the Safety and Efficacy of TW-012R in Alzheimer's Disease With Presenilin 1 (PSEN1) Mutations [NCT04413344]Phase 1/Phase 28 participants (Actual)Interventional2020-06-05Completed
Phase II Study of Stereotypes and Mental Retardation: Neurobiological Basis [NCT00004300]Phase 240 participants InterventionalSuspended
Bromocriptine Quick Release (QR) as Adjunct Therapy in Type 1 Diabetes [NCT02544321]Phase 2108 participants (Actual)Interventional2015-09-30Completed
Comparison of the Effect of Bromocriptine and Pentoxifylline in Mild to Moderate Autoimmune Ophthalmopathy. A Randomized, Controlled, Single Blind, Clinical Trial. [NCT01893450]31 participants (Actual)Interventional2008-06-30Terminated(stopped due to Efficacy demonstrated on a preliminary analysis)
Dopaminergic Effects on Brown Adipose Tissue: the DEBAT Trial [NCT02428933]8 participants (Actual)Interventional2013-10-31Completed
Pathophysiology and Nature of Ovarian Hyperstimulation Syndrome (OHSS) as a Clinical Entity Could be Fully Explained and Effectively Managed as a State of Defective Mineralocorticoid Response [NCT04351126]Phase 2107 participants (Actual)Interventional2019-04-01Completed
Impact of Timed Bromocriptine-QR Therapy Upon Measures of Sympathetic Tone and Vascular Biology in Type 2 Diabetes Subjects [NCT02682901]Phase 484 participants (Actual)Interventional2015-10-05Completed
Dopaminergic Modulation of Frontostriatal Function With a Dopamine Agonist and COMT Inhibitor [NCT02929485]Phase 40 participants (Actual)Interventional2013-07-31Withdrawn
QR-Bromocriptine as an Adjunct to Insulin and Metformin in the Treatment of Type 2 Diabetes [NCT01474018]Phase 415 participants (Actual)Interventional2011-11-30Completed
[information is prepared from clinicaltrials.gov, extracted Sep-2024]

Trial Outcomes

TrialOutcome
NCT00377676 (4) [back to overview]Change in HbA1c From Baseline to Week 24 for Subjects With a Baseline HbA1c of ≥ 7.5% Who Were Taking at Least One Oral Hypoglycemia Agent (OHA) at Baseline.
NCT00377676 (4) [back to overview]Change in HbA1c From Baseline to Week 24 in Subjects Failing Treatment With Metformin Plus a Sulfonylurea
NCT00377676 (4) [back to overview]Number of Subjects Experiencing Serious Cardiovascular Adverse Events
NCT00377676 (4) [back to overview]Subjects Experiencing Serious Adverse Events
NCT00441363 (2) [back to overview]Change in Baseline to End of Study in HbA1c
NCT00441363 (2) [back to overview]Number of Serious Adverse Events Experienced by the Subjects
NCT01474018 (2) [back to overview]Change in A1c
NCT01474018 (2) [back to overview]Total Daily Insulin Dose
NCT02299050 (8) [back to overview]Glucose Metabolism During Mixed Meal Tolerance Test
NCT02299050 (8) [back to overview]HbA1C
NCT02299050 (8) [back to overview]Mean Arterial Blood Pressure
NCT02299050 (8) [back to overview]Percentage Body Fat
NCT02299050 (8) [back to overview]Arterial Stiffness (AS)
NCT02299050 (8) [back to overview]Blood Pressure
NCT02299050 (8) [back to overview]Body Composition
NCT02299050 (8) [back to overview]Endothelial Function,
NCT02544321 (16) [back to overview]Metabolic Markers - GLP1
NCT02544321 (16) [back to overview]Metabolic Markers - Insulin
NCT02544321 (16) [back to overview]Metabolic Markers-fatty Acids
NCT02544321 (16) [back to overview]Metabolic Markers-glucagon
NCT02544321 (16) [back to overview]Hypoglycemia Awareness
NCT02544321 (16) [back to overview]Sleep Duration
NCT02544321 (16) [back to overview]Sleep Quality
NCT02544321 (16) [back to overview]Metabolic Markers-glucose and Triglycerides
NCT02544321 (16) [back to overview]Augmentation Index
NCT02544321 (16) [back to overview]Brachial Artery Distensibility
NCT02544321 (16) [back to overview]Heart Rate Variability (Adolescents)
NCT02544321 (16) [back to overview]Heart Rate Variability (Adults)
NCT02544321 (16) [back to overview]Hyperemia Peripheral Arterial Tonometry (RH-PAT): Reactive Hyperemia Index (RHI)
NCT02544321 (16) [back to overview]Insulin Dosing
NCT02544321 (16) [back to overview]Mean Glucose
NCT02544321 (16) [back to overview]Mean Glycemic Variability
NCT02682901 (8) [back to overview]Change in 30:15 Ratio From Baseline to Endpoint After 24 Weeks of Intervention With Bromocriptine QR vs Placebo
NCT02682901 (8) [back to overview]Change in E/I Ratio From Baseline to Endpoint After 24 Weeks of Intervention With Bromocriptine QR vs Placebo
NCT02682901 (8) [back to overview]Change in Feet ESC From Baseline to Endpoint After 24 Weeks of Intervention With Bromocriptine QR vs Placebo
NCT02682901 (8) [back to overview]Change in Resting Heart Rate From Baseline to Endpoint After 24 Weeks of Intervention With Bromocriptine QR vs Placebo
NCT02682901 (8) [back to overview]Change in RMSSD From Baseline to Endpoint After 24 Weeks of Intervention With Bromocriptine QR vs Placebo
NCT02682901 (8) [back to overview]Change in SDNN From Baseline to Endpoint After 24 Weeks of Intervention With Bromocriptine QR vs Placebo
NCT02682901 (8) [back to overview]Change in Valsalva Ratio From Baseline to Endpoint After 24 Weeks of Intervention With Bromocriptine QR vs Placebo
NCT02682901 (8) [back to overview]Change in Hands ESC From Baseline to Endpoint After 24 Weeks of Intervention With Bromocriptine QR vs Placebo
NCT03496545 (4) [back to overview]Temperature Burden
NCT03496545 (4) [back to overview]Total Time That Temperature is ≥ 38.3ºC
NCT03496545 (4) [back to overview]Incidence of Adverse Events - Symptomatic Hypotension, Nausea and Headache
NCT03496545 (4) [back to overview]Total Time to First Temperature < 37.5ºC
NCT05405244 (6) [back to overview]Ad Libitum Food and Milkshake Intake (g) by TaqIA Allele Status (A1 vs. A2/A2)
NCT05405244 (6) [back to overview]Change in Voxel-wise Blood Oxygen Level-Dependent (BOLD) Brain Activation in Response to Milkshake Anticipation and Receipt vs. Water
NCT05405244 (6) [back to overview]Change in Voxel-wise Blood Oxygen Level-Dependent (BOLD) Brain Activation in Response to Milkshake Anticipation and Receipt vs. Water by TaqIA Allele Status (A1 vs. A2/A2)
NCT05405244 (6) [back to overview]Hedonic Ratings of Food as Measured by a Visual Analog Scale
NCT05405244 (6) [back to overview]Hedonic Ratings of Milkshake Pleasantness and Desire as Measured by a Visual Analog Scale by TaqIA Allele Status (A1 vs. A2/A2)
NCT05405244 (6) [back to overview]Ad Libitum Food and Beverage Intake (g)

Change in HbA1c From Baseline to Week 24 for Subjects With a Baseline HbA1c of ≥ 7.5% Who Were Taking at Least One Oral Hypoglycemia Agent (OHA) at Baseline.

The difference between Cycloset and placebo in the change in HbA1c from baseline to Week 24 was analyzed for subjects with a baseline HbA1c of ≥ 7.5% who were taking at least one oral hypoglycemia agent (OHA) at baseline. The primary analysis was based on subjects from the evaluable per protocol efficacy (EPPE) analysis set with a secondary analysis using subjects from the intent to treat efficacy (ITTE) analysis set for subjects completing 24 weeks of treatment. Change is reported as the absolute difference in % HbA1c. (NCT00377676)
Timeframe: Baseline to week 24

Interventionpercent (Least Squares Mean)
Cycloset-0.41
Placebo0.041

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Change in HbA1c From Baseline to Week 24 in Subjects Failing Treatment With Metformin Plus a Sulfonylurea

"Change in HbA1c from baseline to week 24 in subjects failing treatment with metformin plus a sulfonylurea with failure defined as having a baseline HbA1c value of ≥ 7.5%. Change was measured at week 24 after randomization in subjects having no major protocol violations.~Change is reported as the absolute difference in % HbA1c." (NCT00377676)
Timeframe: Baseline to week 24

Interventionpercent (Least Squares Mean)
Cycloset-0.49
Placebo-0.04

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Number of Subjects Experiencing Serious Cardiovascular Adverse Events

The secondary safety endpoint is number subjects with occurrences of first cardiovascular SAE (myocardial infarction, stroke, in-patient hospitalization for heart failure, angina or revascularization surgery). (NCT00377676)
Timeframe: Baseline to week 52.

InterventionSubjects (Number)
Cycloset31
Placebo30

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Subjects Experiencing Serious Adverse Events

Number of subjects reporting all-cause Serious Adverse Events (SAEs) for usual drug therapy plus Cycloset vs. that for usual drug therapy (UDT) plus placebo from baseline to week 52. (NCT00377676)
Timeframe: From baseline to week 52.

Interventionparticipants (Number)
Cycloset176
Placebo98

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Change in Baseline to End of Study in HbA1c

Too few subjects were enrolled to assess outcome to pre-specified statistical power. (NCT00441363)
Timeframe: up to 24 weeks

Intervention% HbA1c (Mean)
Cycloset-0.4
Placebo-.5

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Number of Serious Adverse Events Experienced by the Subjects

(NCT00441363)
Timeframe: up to 24 weeks

Interventionserious adverse events (Number)
Cycloset1
Placebo0

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Change in A1c

Change from baseline HbA1c between subjects receiving QR-Bromocriptine + metformin + insulin compared to those subjects receiving metformin + insulin (NCT01474018)
Timeframe: Baseline - 24 weeks

Interventionpercent HbA1c (Mean)
Metformin + Insulin9.74
QR-Bromocriptine + Metformin + Insulin7.98

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Total Daily Insulin Dose

Change in total daily insulin dose in patients treated with QR-Bromocriptine +metformin +insulin compared to metformin + insulin alone (NCT01474018)
Timeframe: Baseline - 24 weeks

Interventionunits of insulin (Mean)
Metformin + Insulin199
QR-Bromocriptine + Metformin + Insulin147

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Glucose Metabolism During Mixed Meal Tolerance Test

The objective of this study is to examine the effect of the addition of Cycloset on glycemic control in inadequately controlled (HbA1c 7.5-10.0) T2DM patients who are already on Bydureon (exenatide once weekly) or Victoza (liraglutide ) as part of their standard care. (NCT02299050)
Timeframe: Change from baseline to four to five months

Interventionmg/kg *min (Mean)
Baseline MeasurementMeasurement at 4-5 months
Cycloset1.10.7

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HbA1C

"The objective of this study is to examine the effect of the addition of Cycloset on glycemic control in inadequately controlled (HbA1c 7.5-10.0) T2DM (type 2 diabetes mellitus) patients who are already on Bydureon (exenatide once weekly) or Victoza (liraglutide ) as part of their standard care.~An additional co-primary objective of the study is to examine the effect of Cycloset on postprandial glucose metabolism." (NCT02299050)
Timeframe: Change from baseline to four to five months

Interventionmmol/mol (Mean)
Baseline MeasurementMeasurement at 4-5 months
Cycloset8.37.7

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Mean Arterial Blood Pressure

To assess the potential beneficial effect of Cycloset on change in mean arterial blood pressure (NCT02299050)
Timeframe: Change from baseline to four to five months

InterventionmmHg (Mean)
Baseline MeasurementMeasurement at 4-5 months
Cycloset9790

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Percentage Body Fat

To assess the potential beneficial effect of Cycloset on body fat content (NCT02299050)
Timeframe: Change from baseline to four to five months

Interventionpercentage body fat (Mean)
Baseline MeasurementMeasurement at 4-5 months
Cycloset39.139.3

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Arterial Stiffness (AS)

To assess the potential beneficial effect of Cycloset on arterial stiffness. Arterial stiffness is calculated by the measurement of pulse pressure, where Pulse pressure = SBP - DBP (Where SBP is systolic blood pressure and DBP is diastolic blood pressure) The calculated value is used as a predictor of cardiovascular disease. Higher values indicate that cardiovascular disease is more likely. (NCT02299050)
Timeframe: Change from baseline to four to five months

Interventionau (arbitrary units) (Mean)
Baseline MeasurementMeasurement at 4-5 months
Cycloset19.816.2

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Blood Pressure

To assess the potential beneficial effect of Cycloset on blood pressure. (NCT02299050)
Timeframe: Change from baseline to four to five months

InterventionmmHg (Mean)
Systolic pressure at baselineSystolic pressure at 4-5 monthsDiastolic pressure at baselineDiastolic pressure at 4-5 months
Cycloset1341267873

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Body Composition

To assess the potential beneficial effect of Cycloset on body weight composition. (NCT02299050)
Timeframe: Change from baseline to four to five months

Interventionkg (Mean)
Baseline MeasurementMeasurement at 4-5 months
Cycloset88.187.1

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Endothelial Function,

To assess the potential beneficial effect of Cycloset on endothelial function. This is measured by using pulse pressure. (NCT02299050)
Timeframe: Change from baseline to four to five months

InterventionmmHg (Mean)
Baseline MeasurementMeasurement at 4-5 months
Cycloset5451

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Metabolic Markers - GLP1

At the end of each 4 week intervention period, glucose, insulin, triglycerides, NEFA, GLP-1, and glucagon area under the curve will be measured during Mixed Meal Tolerance Test. (NCT02544321)
Timeframe: 4 weeks

Interventionpmol*hr/L (Least Squares Mean)
Bromocriptine QR (Adolescents)661
Bromocriptine QR (Adults)872
Placebo (Adolescents)766
Placebo (Adults)1196

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Metabolic Markers - Insulin

At the end of each 4 week intervention period, glucose, insulin, triglycerides, NEFA, GLP-1, and glucagon area under the curve will be measured during Mixed Meal Tolerance Test. (NCT02544321)
Timeframe: 4 weeks

InterventionmicroIU*hr/mL (Least Squares Mean)
Bromocriptine QR (Adolescents)4162
Bromocriptine QR (Adults)2386
Placebo (Adolescents)4001
Placebo (Adults)2379

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Metabolic Markers-fatty Acids

At the end of each 4 week intervention period, glucose, insulin, triglycerides, NEFA, GLP-1, and glucagon area under the curve will be measured during Mixed Meal Tolerance Test. (NCT02544321)
Timeframe: 4 weeks

InterventionmicroEq*hr/L (Least Squares Mean)
Bromocriptine QR (Adolescents)123334
Bromocriptine QR (Adults)75561
Placebo (Adolescents)93661
Placebo (Adults)67497

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Metabolic Markers-glucagon

At the end of each 4 week intervention period, glucose, insulin, triglycerides, NEFA, GLP-1, and glucagon area under the curve will be measured during Mixed Meal Tolerance Test. (NCT02544321)
Timeframe: 4 weeks

Interventionpg*hr/mL (Least Squares Mean)
Bromocriptine QR (Adolescents)2398
Bromocriptine QR (Adults)2160
Placebo (Adolescents)2011
Placebo (Adults)2350

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Hypoglycemia Awareness

"At the end of each 4 week intervention period, we will measure Hypoglycemia Awareness using the Gold method (7 point Likert scale: Possible scores range from 1 to 7. higher scores indicate more impaired awareness of hypoglycemia, and a worse outcome), Clarke method (8 question questionnaire characterizing hypoglycemia awareness. Possible scores range from 0-7, with higher scores indicating less awareness and a worse outcome), and the McAuley score (list of symptoms with a 7 point Likert scale for each. Possible scores range from 1-7 for each item, and are averaged across all symptoms, for a total possible score range of 1-7, with higher scores indicating more symptom awareness, and a better outcome).~Incorrectly initially entered as primary outcome. per protocol this has always been a secondary outcome." (NCT02544321)
Timeframe: 4 weeks

,,,
Interventionscore on a scale (Least Squares Mean)
Gold method scoresClarke method scoresMcAuley score
Bromocriptine QR (Adolescents)2.151.363.25
Bromocriptine QR (Adults)3.022.333.40
Placebo (Adolescents)2.001.333.21
Placebo (Adults)3.152.672.90

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Sleep Duration

At the end of each 4 week intervention period, measurements of sleep duration on weekdays and weekends (minutes) by a Philips Spectrum Plus sleep monitor will be obtained. (NCT02544321)
Timeframe: 4 weeks

,,,
Interventionminutes (Mean)
weekdaysweekends
Bromocriptine QR (Adolescents)433486
Bromocriptine QR (Adults)394458
Placebo (Adolescents)414464
Placebo (Adults)402453

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Sleep Quality

At the end of each 4 week intervention period, measurements of sleep efficiency (percent of time in bed spent asleep) during the week and on weekends by a Philips Spectrum Plus sleep monitor will be obtained. (NCT02544321)
Timeframe: 4 weeks

,,,
Interventionpercent (Mean)
efficiency during the weekefficiency weekends
Bromocriptine QR (Adolescents)87.988.3
Bromocriptine QR (Adults)90.489.7
Placebo (Adolescents)89.089.0
Placebo (Adults)90.490.9

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Metabolic Markers-glucose and Triglycerides

At the end of each 4 week intervention period, glucose, insulin, triglycerides, NEFA, GLP-1, and glucagon area under the curve will be measured during Mixed Meal Tolerance Test. (NCT02544321)
Timeframe: 4 weeks

,,,
Interventionmg*hr/dL (Least Squares Mean)
GlucoseTriglycerides
Bromocriptine QR (Adolescents)117353452
Bromocriptine QR (Adults)92283445
Placebo (Adolescents)113563066
Placebo (Adults)123573460

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Augmentation Index

At the end of each 4 week intervention period, the % will be measured by SyphgmoCor. The Augmentation Index measures vascular stiffness by comparing pulse pressure of the reflected wave to the primary wave. HIGHER scores indicate greater vascular stiffness and higher cardiovascular risk, but a normal range has not been clearly defined. Presented as AI normalized to a heart rate of 75 (AI75). (NCT02544321)
Timeframe: 4 weeks

InterventionPercentage of pressure wave (Least Squares Mean)
Bromocriptine QR (Adolescents)10.42
Bromocriptine QR (Adults)-2.0
Placebo (Adolescents)12.52
Placebo (Adults)-2.5

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Brachial Artery Distensibility

At the end of each 4 week intervention period, we will measure the brachial artery distensibility as a measure of vascular stiffness by Dynapulse (%/mmHg). A larger number indicates less stiffness (ie greater compliance). (NCT02544321)
Timeframe: 4 weeks

Intervention%/mmHg (Least Squares Mean)
Bromocriptine QR (Adolescents)6.35
Bromocriptine QR (Adults)6.2
Placebo (Adolescents)6.14
Placebo (Adults)6.4

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Heart Rate Variability (Adolescents)

At the end of each 4 week intervention period we will measure the autonomic function by HRV measured by endopat and reported using the single gold standard measure of SDNN (standard deviation of beat to beat time interval). Normal is >100, 50-100 indicates compromised autonomic function. (NCT02544321)
Timeframe: 4 weeks

Interventionmilliseconds (Least Squares Mean)
Bromocriptine QR (Adolescents)73
Placebo (Adolescents)76.4

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Heart Rate Variability (Adults)

At the end of each 4 week intervention period we will measure the autonomic function by ECG. Ratio of maximum heart rate/minimum heartrate during a valsalva maneuver. (NCT02544321)
Timeframe: 4 weeks

Interventionratio (Least Squares Mean)
Bromocriptine QR (Adults)1.09
Placebo (Adults)1.14

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Hyperemia Peripheral Arterial Tonometry (RH-PAT): Reactive Hyperemia Index (RHI)

At the end of each 4 week intervention period, we will measure the reactive hyperemia Index (RHI). The Reactive Hyperemia Index (RHI) measures increased bloodflow after vascular occlusion. Higher scores indicate lower CVD risk and a better outcome, Scores of less than 1.67 may be considered abnormal. Scores of 1.67 1.67-2.09 may be considered borderline, and scores of 2.10 or higher my be considered normal. (NCT02544321)
Timeframe: 4 weeks

Interventionscore on a scale (Least Squares Mean)
Bromocriptine QR (Adolescents)1.95
Bromocriptine QR (Adults)2.1
Placebo (Adolescents)2.24
Placebo (Adults)2.2

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Insulin Dosing

At the end of each 4 week intervention period, we will measure the effect of BCQR on insulin dosing (units//kg/day) (NCT02544321)
Timeframe: 4 weeks

Interventionunits//kg/day (Least Squares Mean)
Bromocriptine QR (Adolescents)0.9
Bromocriptine QR (Adults)0.54
Placebo (Adolescents)0.88
Placebo (Adults)0.56

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Mean Glucose

At the end of each 4 week intervention period, we will measure the effect of Bromocriptine Quick Release on average glucose levels (mg/dl) by continuous glucose monitoring (NCT02544321)
Timeframe: 4 weeks

Interventionmg/dl (Least Squares Mean)
Bromocriptine QR (Adolescents)182
Bromocriptine QR (Adults)165
Placebo (Adolescents)181
Placebo (Adults)165

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Mean Glycemic Variability

At the end of each 4 week intervention period, we will measure the effect of Bromocriptine Quick Release on glycemic variability throughout the day (mg/dl), measured as SD of all glucose values throughout the last 7 days of intervention. Incorrectly initially entered as primary outcome. per protocol this has always been a secondary outcome. (NCT02544321)
Timeframe: 4 weeks

Interventionmg/dl (Least Squares Mean)
Bromocriptine QR (Adolescents)71
Bromocriptine QR (Adults)61
Placebo (Adolescents)73
Placebo (Adults)63

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Change in 30:15 Ratio From Baseline to Endpoint After 24 Weeks of Intervention With Bromocriptine QR vs Placebo

Lying to Standing (30:15) ratio: HR increases after standing to maintain an appropriate stroke volume, and then decreases. The maximum increase in heart rate generally occurs between the 10th and the 20th beat after standing, whereas heart rate generally returns to lower values between the 25th and the 35th beat. After lying in the supine position for at least 5 minutes, the subject is invited to stand up quickly but remain relaxed for 3 to 5 minutes. The ratio is the longest RR interval measured between the 25th and the 35th beat divided by the shortest RR interval measured between the 10th and the 20th beat after standing up. (NCT02682901)
Timeframe: Baseline to 24 weeks

Intervention30:15 ratio change (Mean)
Cycloset (Bromocriptine-QR)-0.03
Placebo-0.02

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Change in E/I Ratio From Baseline to Endpoint After 24 Weeks of Intervention With Bromocriptine QR vs Placebo

"Cardiac Autonomic Reflex Tests (CARTs) based on heart rate variations are the deep breathing test (E/I ratio), the lying to standing test (30:15 ratio) and the Valsalva maneuver (Valsalva ratio). These tests require a continuous recording of heart rate by either a simple electrocardiograph (ECG), subsequently elaborated via a specialist software. It is essential to inspect the ECG trace (on paper or monitor) in order to exclude artifacts or any type of arrhythmias from the calculations.~Expiration/Inspiration (E/I) ratio: Standardized CART that measures parasympathetic control of the HR. The subject in a supine or sitting position is asked to breathe deeply at six breaths per minute (5 seconds in and 5 seconds out) for one minute. The E/I ratio is obtained by calculating the ratio between the average of the 3 longest RR intervals during expiration and the average of the 3 shortest RR intervals during inspiration." (NCT02682901)
Timeframe: Baseline to 24 weeks

InterventionE/I ratio change (Mean)
Cycloset (Bromocriptine-QR)-0.02
Placebo-0.05

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Change in Feet ESC From Baseline to Endpoint After 24 Weeks of Intervention With Bromocriptine QR vs Placebo

The coprimary outcome is the change, from baseline to endpoint (24 weeks), of peripheral autonomic function using sudorimetry. Sudoscan measures the sweating capacity of palms and soles and is expressed as electrochemical skin conductance (ESC) of feet and hands. ESC, expressed in micro-Siemens (µS), is the ratio between the current generated and the constant direct voltage stimulus applied to palms and soles between the electrodes. ESC is dependent on the glands' capability to transfer chloride ions and reflects small-C fiber function. (NCT02682901)
Timeframe: Baseline to 24 weeks

InterventionmicroSiemmens (µS) change (Mean)
Cycloset (Bromocriptine-QR)-2.40
Placebo-4.57

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Change in Resting Heart Rate From Baseline to Endpoint After 24 Weeks of Intervention With Bromocriptine QR vs Placebo

The primary outcome is the change from baseline to endpoint (24 weeks) in measures of autonomic function using provocative tests (CARTs), measures of heart rate variability and resting heart rate (NCT02682901)
Timeframe: Baseline to 24 weeks

Interventionbeats per minute change (Mean)
Cycloset (Bromocriptine-QR)-0.73
Placebo-2.00

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Change in RMSSD From Baseline to Endpoint After 24 Weeks of Intervention With Bromocriptine QR vs Placebo

"Time domain analysis of Heart Rate Variability includes SDNN and RMSSD measurements. It is acquired by continuous recording of heart rate by simple electrocardiograph (ECG) with the subject in supine or sitting position, resting and breathing at a controlled rate (15 breaths per minute) for 5 minutes. It is essential to inspect the ECG trace in order to exclude artifacts or any type of arrhythmias from the calculations.~RMSSD is the root mean square of successive R-R intervals and is a measure primarily of parasympathetic activity on HR." (NCT02682901)
Timeframe: Baseline to 24 weeks

InterventionMilliseconds (ms) change (Mean)
Cycloset (Bromocriptine-QR)-3.16
Placebo-0.57

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Change in SDNN From Baseline to Endpoint After 24 Weeks of Intervention With Bromocriptine QR vs Placebo

"Time domain analysis of Heart Rate Variability includes SDNN and RMSSD measurements. It is acquired by continuous recording of heart rate by simple electrocardiograph (ECG) with the subject in supine or sitting position, resting and breathing at a controlled rate (15 breaths per minute) for 5 minutes. It is essential to inspect the ECG trace in order to exclude artifacts or any type of arrhythmias from the calculations.~SDNN is the standard deviation of the beat to beat (NN) variability which is a measure of both sympathetic and parasympathetic action on HR." (NCT02682901)
Timeframe: Baseline to 24 weeks

InterventionMilliseconds (ms) change (Mean)
Cycloset (Bromocriptine-QR)-3.97
Placebo-0.80

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Change in Valsalva Ratio From Baseline to Endpoint After 24 Weeks of Intervention With Bromocriptine QR vs Placebo

"Cardiac Autonomic Reflex Tests (CARTs) based on heart rate variations are the deep breathing test (E/I ratio), the lying to standing test (30:15 ratio) and the Valsalva maneuver (Valsalva ratio). These tests require a continuous recording of heart rate by simple electrocardiograph (ECG), subsequently elaborated via a specialist software. It is essential to inspect the ECG trace (on paper or monitor) in order to exclude artifacts or any type of arrhythmias from the calculations.~Valsalva maneuver is a forced expiration with an open glottis against resistance. This causes changes in both BP and heart rate. During strain, tachycardia is initially determined by vagal withdrawal and afterwards by sympathetic activation. The Valsalva ratio is calculated as the ratio between the longest RR interval after the expiratory straining and the shortest RR interval during the expiratory straining" (NCT02682901)
Timeframe: Baseline to 24 weeks

InterventionValsalva ratio change (Mean)
Cycloset (Bromocriptine-QR)-0.02
Placebo0.02

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Change in Hands ESC From Baseline to Endpoint After 24 Weeks of Intervention With Bromocriptine QR vs Placebo

The coprimary outcome is the change, from baseline to endpoint (24 weeks), of peripheral autonomic function using sudorimetry. Sudoscan measures the sweating capacity of palms and soles and is expressed as electrochemical skin conductance (ESC) of feet and hands. ESC, expressed in micro-Siemens (µS), is the ratio between the current generated and the constant direct voltage stimulus applied to palms and soles between the electrodes. ESC is dependent on the glands' capability to transfer chloride ions and reflects small-C fiber function. (NCT02682901)
Timeframe: Baseline to 24 weeks

InterventionmicroSiemmens (µS) change (Mean)
Cycloset (Bromocriptine-QR)-1.71
Placebo-9.83

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Temperature Burden

Mean total body temperature burden above 37°C over 48 hours during which patient receives either control or intervention medication. (NCT03496545)
Timeframe: over 48 hours

InterventionTemperature in degrees Celsius (Mean)
Acetaminophen37.8
Bromocriptine and Acetaminophen37.7

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Total Time That Temperature is ≥ 38.3ºC

Time in minutes where the temperature is ≥ 38.3ºC during the 48 hours of control versus intervention administration. (NCT03496545)
Timeframe: 48 hours

InterventionMinutes (Mean)
Acetaminophen216
Bromocriptine and Acetaminophen300

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Incidence of Adverse Events - Symptomatic Hypotension, Nausea and Headache

Episodes of symptomatic hypotension, including decrease in supine systolic and diastolic pressures of greater than 20mm and 10mm Hg respectively with patient reported accompanying symptoms of light headedness or dizziness and incidence of nausea and headache. (NCT03496545)
Timeframe: Nursing assessment at every shift during 48 hour study period after first drug administration

,
InterventionParticipants (Count of Participants)
Decrease in blood pressureNauseaHeadache
Acetaminophen1228
Bromocriptine and Acetaminophen17312

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Total Time to First Temperature < 37.5ºC

Time in minutes it took after medication administration for the temperature to reach < 37.5ºC. (NCT03496545)
Timeframe: 48 hours

InterventionMinutes (Mean)
Acetaminophen253.5
Bromocriptine and Acetaminophen556

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Ad Libitum Food and Milkshake Intake (g) by TaqIA Allele Status (A1 vs. A2/A2)

Testing the drug by gene (TaqIA) interaction on ad libitum food intake (g).The presence of the high-risk A1 allele of the TaqIA polymorphism (rs1800497) in the DRD2 gene was determined from saliva samples and is compared to the A2/A2 variant. (NCT05405244)
Timeframe: Within 15 minutes of completion of the ad libitum period

,,,
Interventiong (Mean)
Snacks intakeMilkshake intake
Bromocriptine - TaqIA A172.126.1
Bromocriptine - TaqIA A2/A270.723.3
Placebo - TaqIA A175.235.5
Placebo - TaqIA A2/A291.430.9

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Change in Voxel-wise Blood Oxygen Level-Dependent (BOLD) Brain Activation in Response to Milkshake Anticipation and Receipt vs. Water

"The fMRI paradigm assesses evoked BOLD response to cue-elicited anticipation and receipt of a milkshake and water. A region-of-interest (ROI) approach is used to assess changes in BOLD signal in the striatum. The striatal response is assessed for the two contrasts of interest: milkshake>h2o anticipation and milkshake>h2o receipt. Positive values reflect a higher striatal BOLD activation for the milkshake; negative reflects a higher striatal BOLD activation for the water. Parameter estimates of the relative BOLD response to each of these contrasts are extracted and compared between the two arms.~The paradigm has 64 trials and each trial starts with the presentation of a cue for 1s signaling the impending delivery of either 3 mL of highly palatable milkshake or a control water solution over a period of 6s. Taste delivery is followed by a wait period and rinse (tasteless solution). The next trial begins after a 1-9s jitter. Order of milkshake and water trials is pseudo-randomized." (NCT05405244)
Timeframe: Baseline and 2 Weeks

,
Interventionarbitrary units (Mean)
Milkshake cue > Water cueMilkshake taste > Water taste
Bromocriptine50.24-14.32
Placebo15.663.75

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Change in Voxel-wise Blood Oxygen Level-Dependent (BOLD) Brain Activation in Response to Milkshake Anticipation and Receipt vs. Water by TaqIA Allele Status (A1 vs. A2/A2)

"The fMRI paradigm assesses evoked BOLD response to cue-elicited anticipation and receipt of a milkshake and water. A region-of-interest (ROI) approach is used to assess changes in BOLD signal in the striatum. The striatal response is assessed for the two contrasts of interest: milkshake>h2o anticipation and milkshake>h2o receipt. Positive values reflect a higher striatal BOLD activation for the milkshake; negative reflects a higher striatal BOLD activation for the water. Parameter estimates of the relative BOLD response to these contrasts are extracted and used to test the drug by gene (TaqIA) interaction.~The paradigm has 64 trials and each trial starts with the presentation of a cue signaling the impending delivery of either 3 mL of highly palatable milkshake or a control water solution over a 6s period. Taste delivery is followed by a wait period and rinse (tasteless solution). The next trial begins after a 1-9s jitter. Order of milkshake and water trials is pseudo-randomized." (NCT05405244)
Timeframe: Baseline and 2 Weeks

,,,
Interventionarbitrary units (Mean)
Milkshake cue > Water cueMilkshake taste > Water taste
Bromocriptine - TaqIA A199.14-27.21
Bromocriptine - TaqIA A2/A2-8.441.16
Placebo - TaqIA A171.54-14.64
Placebo - TaqIA A2/A2-51.425.82

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Hedonic Ratings of Food as Measured by a Visual Analog Scale

"Testing the effects of the drug on hedonic ratings (pleasantness, desire to consume) of milkshake and snacks on a scale from -100 to 100.~Pleasantness was assessed by asking 'How pleasant is this taste?', with responses ranging from -100 (most unpleasant imaginable) to 100 (most pleasant imaginable).~Desire to consume was assessed by asking 'How much would you want to eat/drink this?', with responses ranging from -100 (least desirable imaginable) to 100 (most desirable imaginable)." (NCT05405244)
Timeframe: Up to 5 minutes prior to ad libitum period start

,
Interventionscore on a scale (Mean)
Snack PleasantnessSnack DesireMilkshake PleasantnessMilkshake Desire
Bromocriptine32.611.222.7-5.1
Placebo32.214.632.4-5.6

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Hedonic Ratings of Milkshake Pleasantness and Desire as Measured by a Visual Analog Scale by TaqIA Allele Status (A1 vs. A2/A2)

"Testing the drug by gene (TaqIA) interaction on hedonic ratings (pleasantness, desire to consume) of milkshake on a scale from -100 to 100. Testing the drug by gene (TaqIA) interaction on ad libitum milkshake (g). The presence of the high-risk A1 allele of the TaqIA polymorphism (rs1800497) in the DRD2 gene was determined from saliva samples and is compared to the A2/A2 variant.~Pleasantness was assessed by asking 'How pleasant is this taste?', with responses ranging from -100 (most unpleasant imaginable) to 100 (most pleasant imaginable).~Desire to consume was assessed by asking 'How much would you want to eat/drink this?', with responses ranging from -100 (least desirable imaginable) to 100 (most desirable imaginable)." (NCT05405244)
Timeframe: Up to 5 minutes prior to ad libitum period start

,,,
Interventionscore on a scale (Mean)
PleasantnessDesire
Bromocriptine - TaqIA A127.73.7
Bromocriptine - TaqIA A2/A215.1-18.1
Placebo - TaqIA A129.916.6
Placebo - TaqIA A2/A212.2-21.5

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Ad Libitum Food and Beverage Intake (g)

Ad libitum food intake of highly-palatable snacks is assessed during each intervention arm. Participants are left alone for 25 minutes to eat as much as they want from a selection of snacks (M&Ms, Skittles, Doritos, cheddar popcorn) and a chocolate milkshake. Both snacks and milkshake are pre- and post-weighed to determine ad libitum food intake. (NCT05405244)
Timeframe: Within 15 minutes of completion of the ad libitum period

,
Interventiong (Mean)
Snacks intakeMilkshake intake
Bromocriptine71.524.9
Placebo81.933.6

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