GABA antagonist

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GABA antagonists are drugs which inhibit the action of GABA.

Examples include Bicuculline and Metrazol, and the benzodiazepine GABAA receptor antagonist Flumazenil.

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  • MeSH GABA+antagonists
 This biochemistry article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.
v • d • e
Receptor agonists, antagonists, and reuptake inhibitors
BA/M: 5-HT (serotonin) receptor
Serotonin receptor agonist • Serotonin antagonist (5-HT3) • Serotonin uptake inhibitor (SSRI)
BA/M: Dopamine receptor
Dopamine agonist • Dopamine antagonist • Dopamine reuptake inhibitor
BA/M: Adrenergic receptor
Adrenergic agonist (Alpha, Beta2) • Adrenergic antagonist (Alpha, Beta) • Adrenergic uptake inhibitor
BA/M: Histamine receptor
Histamine agonist • Histamine antagonist (H1, H2)
Acetylcholine receptor
Cholinergic (Muscarinic, Nicotinic) • Anticholinergic (Muscarinic, Nicotinic) • Acetylcholinesterase inhibitor
AA: GABA receptor
GABA agonist • GABA antagonist
AA: Glutamate receptor
NMDA receptor (NMDA receptor antagonist)
Categories: Biochemistry stubs | GABA antagonists
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