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Maternal cocaine addiction. II: An animal model for the study of brainstem mechanisms operative in Sudden Infant Death Syndrome
J. L. Gingras
*
,
D. Weese-Mayer
*
Corresponding author for this work
Pediatrics
Research output
:
Contribution to journal
›
Article
›
peer-review
19
Scopus citations
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Keyphrases
Operative
100%
Brainstem
100%
Cocaine Dependence
100%
Sudden Infant Death Syndrome
100%
Cocaine
80%
Arousal
60%
Respiratory Control
60%
Respiratory Regulation
60%
Increased Incidence
40%
Neurotransmitters
20%
Transmitter
20%
Neurotransmitter Metabolism
20%
Brain Structure
20%
Monoamines
20%
Exposed Infants
20%
Neuronal Network
20%
Forebrain
20%
Apnea
20%
Cocaine Use
20%
Locus Coeruleus
20%
Brain Neurotransmitters
20%
Prenatal Brain Development
20%
Cocaine Exposure
20%
Rabbit Pups
20%
Neuroscience
Brainstem
100%
Respiratory Regulation
100%
Cocaine Dependence
100%
Neurotransmitter
66%
Norepinephrine
33%
Brain Development
33%
Locus Coeruleus
33%
Monoamine
33%
Metabolic Pathway
33%