No involvement of the adenosine A2A receptor in tardive dyskinesia in Russian psychiatric inpatients from Siberia

Human Psychopharmacology
Svetlana A IvanovaAnton J M Loonen

Abstract

The adenosine A2A receptor forms a heteromeric complex with the striatal dopamine D2 receptor. We examined whether a specific polymorphism in adenosine A2A receptor (2592 C/Tins) is associated with tardive dyskinesia. Tardive dyskinesia was assessed cross-sectionally in 146 Caucasian psychiatric inpatients from Siberia. Between-group comparisons of genotypic or allelic frequencies showed no statistically significant difference. Logistic regression analysis with the occurrence of tardive dyskinesia as dependent variable showed no significant association with age, duration of illness, gender, and genotype. The interaction between the A2A and D2 receptors seems not involved in the development of tardive dyskinesia.

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Citations

Jan 21, 2015·The World Journal of Biological Psychiatry : the Official Journal of the World Federation of Societies of Biological Psychiatry·Svetlana A IvanovaAnton J M Loonen
Jan 7, 2014·Progress in Neuro-psychopharmacology & Biological Psychiatry·Svetlana A IvanovaAnton J M Loonen
Jul 30, 2016·Pharmacogenomics·Rachel K LanningDaniel J Müller
Jan 22, 2019·Molecular Psychiatry·Olga Yu FedorenkoАleksandr О Kibitov
Feb 2, 2013·Current Opinion in Psychiatry·Daniel J MüllerClement C Zai

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