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Dive into the research topics where D. Cyril D'Souza is active.

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Featured researches published by D. Cyril D'Souza.


Psychopharmacology | 2003

NMDA receptor antagonist effects, cortical glutamatergic function, and schizophrenia: toward a paradigm shift in medication development

John H. Krystal; D. Cyril D'Souza; Daniel H. Mathalon; Edward Perry; Aysenil Belger; Ralph E. Hoffman

There is an urgent need to improve the pharmacotherapy of schizophrenia despite the introduction of important new medications. New treatment insights may come from appreciating the therapeutic implications of model psychoses. In particular, basic and clinical studies have employed the N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) glutamate receptor antagonist, ketamine, as a probe of NMDA receptor contributions to cognition and behavior. These studies illustrate a translational neuroscience approach for probing mechanistic hypotheses related to the neurobiology and treatment of schizophrenia and other disorders. Two particular pathophysiologic themes associated with schizophrenia, the disturbance of cortical connectivity and the disinhibition of glutamatergic activity may be modeled by the administration of NMDA receptor antagonists. The purpose of this review is to consider the possibility that agents that attenuate these two components of NMDA receptor antagonist response may play complementary roles in the treatment of schizophrenia.


Pharmacology & Therapeutics | 2003

N-methyl-D-aspartate glutamate receptors and alcoholism: reward, dependence, treatment, and vulnerability.

John H. Krystal; Ismene L. Petrakis; Graeme F. Mason; Louis Trevisan; D. Cyril D'Souza

This review takes a translational neuroscience perspective on the role of glutamate systems in human ethanol abuse and dependence. Ethanol is a simple molecule with profound effects on many chemical systems in the brain. Glutamate is the primary excitatory neurotransmitter in the brain. Glutamatergic systems are targets for the actions of ethanol via its antagonism of the N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) subtype of the glutamate receptor and other mechanisms. The modulation of glutamatergic function by ethanol contributes to both euphoric and dysphoric consequences of ethanol intoxication. Adaptations within glutamatergic systems appear to contribute to ethanol tolerance and dependence and to both acute and protracted features of ethanol withdrawal. Perhaps because of the important glutamatergic mediation of the behavioral effects of ethanol, glutamatergic systems appear to contribute to the vulnerability to alcoholism, and novel glutamatergic agents may play a role in the treatment of ethanol abuse and dependence.


Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 2003

NMDA Receptor Antagonism and the Ethanol Intoxication Signal

John H. Krystal; Ismene L. Petrakis; Evgeny Krupitsky; Christian G. Schütz; Louis Trevisan; D. Cyril D'Souza

Abstract: This paper reviews clinical evidence suggesting that antagonism of the N‐methyl‐d‐aspartate subtype of glutamate receptors by ethanol may convey an important component of the ethanol intoxication signal, that is, subjective and objective responses associated with the consumption of a large amount of ethanol. It will then review recent evidence that two phenotypes associated with increased risk for heavy alcohol consumption, recovering ethanol‐dependent patients, and healthy individuals with a family history of alcohol dependence, exhibit reduced sensitivity to the dysphoric consequences of administration of the NMDA receptor antagonist, ketamine. Each of these groups displays reduced sensitivity to a potentially important response that might normally trigger the cessation of ethanol consumption. These data raise the possibility that alterations in NMDA receptor function that reduce the response to the NMDA antagonist component of ethanol may increase the risk for heavy drinking. This hypothesis is consistent with growing evidence that NMDA receptor antagonists may play a role in the treatment of alcoholism by suppressing alcohol withdrawal, reducing the development or expression of alcohol tolerance, or preventing or reversing the sensitiziation to ethanol effects.


Neuropsychopharmacology | 2003

Altered NMDA glutamate receptor antagonist response in recovering ethanol-dependent patients.

John H. Krystal; Ismene L. Petrakis; Diana Limoncelli; Elizabeth Webb; Ralitza Gueorgueva; D. Cyril D'Souza; Nashaat N. Boutros; Louis Trevisan; Dennis S. Charney

Ethanol is an antagonist of the N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) glutamate receptor. Ethanol dependence upregulates NMDA receptors and contributes to crosstolerance with selective NMDA receptor antagonists in animals. This study evaluated whether recovering ethanol-dependent patients show evidence of a reduced level of response to the effects of the NMDA receptor antagonist, ketamine. In this double-blind study, 34 recently detoxified alcohol-dependent patients and 26 healthy comparison subjects completed 3 test days involving a 40-min infusion of saline, ketamine 0.1 mg/kg, or ketamine 0.5 mg/kg in a randomized order. Recovering ethanol-dependent patients showed reduced perceptual alterations, dysphoric mood, and impairments in executive cognitive functions during ketamine infusion relative to the healthy comparison group. No attenuation of ketamine-induced amnestic effects, euphoria, or activation was observed. The alterations in NMDA receptor function observed in recovering ethanol-dependent patients may have important implications for ethanol tolerance, ethanol dependence, and the treatment of alcoholism.


Drug Discovery Today | 2009

Neuroplasticity as a target for the pharmacotherapy of anxiety disorders, mood disorders, and schizophrenia

John H. Krystal; David F. Tolin; Gerard Sanacora; Stacy A. Castner; Graham V. Williams; Deane E. Aikins; Ralph E. Hoffman; D. Cyril D'Souza

Current treatments for psychiatric disorders were developed with the aim of providing symptomatic relief rather than reversing underlying abnormalities in neuroplasticity or neurodevelopment that might contribute to psychiatric disorders. This review considers the possibility that psychiatric treatments might be developed that target neuroplasticity deficits or that manipulate neuroplasticity in novel ways. These treatments might not provide direct symptomatic relief. However, they might complement or enhance current pharmacotherapies and psychotherapies aimed at the prevention and treatment of psychiatric disorders. In considering neuroplasticity as a target for the treatment of psychiatric disorders, we build on exciting new findings in the areas of anxiety disorders, mood disorders, and schizophrenia.


Medical Clinics of North America | 2001

Current perspectives on the pathophysiology of schizophrenia, depression, and anxiety disorders.

John H. Krystal; D. Cyril D'Souza; Gerard Sanacora; Andrew W. Goddard; Dennis S. Charney

This article reviews the rapidly changing concepts related to the pathophysiology of major psychiatric disorders. The current era is an exciting one for psychiatric research and the rapidity with which advances are being made is a source of hope to patients with these disorders and for society.


Harvard Review of Psychiatry | 1999

NMDA Agonists and Antagonists as Probes of Glutamatergic Dysfunction and Pharmacotherapies in Neuropsychiatric Disorders

John H. Krystal; D. Cyril D'Souza; Ismene L. Petrakis; Aysenil Belger; Robert M. Berman; Dennis S. Charney; Walid Abi-Saab; Steven Madonick


Schizophrenia Research | 1999

Toward a rational pharmacotherapy of comorbid substance abuse in schizophrenic patients

John H. Krystal; D. Cyril D'Souza; Steven Madonick; Ismene L. Petrakis


Archive | 2004

Marijuana and Madness: Cannabinoid ‘model’ psychosis, dopamine–cannabinoid interactions and implications for schizophrenia

D. Cyril D'Souza; Hyun-Sang Cho; Edward Perry; John H. Krystal


Schizophrenia Research | 2010

Clinical significance of neurological soft signs in schizophrenia: Factor analysis of the Neurological Evaluation Scale

R. Andrew Sewell; Edward B. Perry; Laurence P. Karper; Morris D. Bell; Paul H. Lysaker; Joseph L. Goulet; Louise M. Brenner; Joseph Erdos; D. Cyril D'Souza; John Seibyl; John H. Krystal

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Dennis S. Charney

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Aysenil Belger

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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