Skip to main content

and
  1. No Access

    Article

    Commentary on: “Stereotyped activities produced by amphetamine in several animal species and man.” Psychopharmacologia (1967) 11:300–310

    R. Fog, A. Randrup in Psychopharmacology (2002)

  2. No Access

    Article

    Extrapyramidal reactions and amine metabolites in cerebrospinal fluid during haloperidol and clozapine treatment of schizophrenic patients

    8 male schizophrenic patients participated in a double-blind, cross over study of the extrapyramidal side-effects of haloperidol and clozapine (acute dystonia, Parkinsonism and tardive dyskinesia), together wi...

    J. Gerlach, K. Thorsen, R. Fog in Psychopharmacologia (1975)

  3. No Access

    Article

    Short-term effect of perphenazine enanthate on the rat brain

    Having previously demonstrated that there is an approximately 20% loss of nerve cells in the basal ganglia (but no loss in the cortex) of rats following the administration of perphenazine enanthate for 12 mont...

    H. Pakkenberg, R. Fog in Psychopharmacologia (1974)

  4. No Access

    Article

    The long-term effect of perphenazine enanthate on the rat brain. Some metabolic and anatomical observations

    Perphenazine enanthate 3.4 mg/kg per injection, was administered subcutaneously to rats every second week over a period of a year, a total of 31 mg per animal being given. The animals were observed weekly and ...

    H. Pakkenberg, R. Fog, B. Nilakantan in Psychopharmacologia (1973)

  5. No Access

    Article

    Intrastriatal injection of quaternary butyrophenones and oxypertine: Neuroleptic effect in rats

    Bilateral intrastriatal microinjections in rat brains of quaternary neuroleptic drugs of the butyrophenone type (haloperidol, benperidol, floropipamide) and the indole type (oxypertine) antagonize amphetamine-...

    R. Fog, A. Randrup, H. Pakkenberg in Psychopharmacologia (1971)

  6. No Access

    Article

    Lesions in corpus striatum and cortex of rat brains and the effect on pharmacologically induced stereotyped, aggressive and cataleptic behaviour

    Large bilateral lesions affecting 30–90% of the corpus striatum inhibit stereotyped behaviour in rats injected subcutaneously with amphetamine, but do not prevent rage reactions induced by injection of a monoa...

    R. Fog, A. Randrup, H. Pakkenberg in Psychopharmacologia (1970)