Causes of Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism: BiologicalBiochemical Perspectives - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Causes of Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism: BiologicalBiochemical Perspectives

Description:

Source: Eighth Special Report to the U.S. Congress on Alcohol and Health ... drinking independent of physical dependence and withdrawal ... Endogenous Opiates ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:233
Avg rating:3.0/5.0

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Causes of Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism: BiologicalBiochemical Perspectives


1
Causes of Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism
Biological/Biochemical Perspectives
2
Neurobehavioral Aspects of Alcohol Consumption
  • Source Eighth Special Report to the U.S.
    Congress on Alcohol and Health
  • Secretary of Health and Human Services
  • September, 1993
  • pp 113-128

3
Alcohol-Seeking Behavior and the Development of
Chronic Drinking
  • Physical Dependence
  • tolerance
  • withdrawal
  • cause or consequence?
  • Psychological Dependence
  • compulsive craving
  • drinking independent of physical dependence and
    withdrawal
  • A fundamental question is Are the reported
    pleasure sensations that lead to alcohol-seeking
    due to its euphoric effect, or to the reduction
    of some underlying anxiety?

4
Reinforcement
  • Reinforcement is the process whereby the
    probability of a response is increased if it
    results in a particular effect
  • positive reinforcement
  • learned behavior to achieve a reward
  • negative reinforcement
  • learned behavior to avoid discomfort

5
Brain Stimulation Reward (BSR)
  • BSR is intracranial self-stimulation
  • measure response rate of self stimulation
  • measure threshold current needed to sustain
    self-stimulation

6
Alcohols Effects on Brain Stimulation Reward
(BSR)
  • Rat response rates increased during BAC rise no
    effect during BAC drop phase
  • Thought to be analogous to human sensations of
    pleasure and euphoria during BAC rise.

7
Biphasic Action of AlcoholStimulation(low BAC)
then Sedation (high BAC)
  • Low doses stimulate Spontaneous Motor Activity
    (SMA) in rats during rising BAC
  • High doses give sedation and sleep
  • SMA stimulation occurs through elevating dopamine
    levels in ventral tegmental area of the brain
    (nucleus acumbens reward center)
  • These changes are correlated with the enhancement
    of the brain stimulation reward threshold

8
Neurochemical Mechanisms of Alcohol Reinforcement
  • Dopamine
  • alcohol and cocaine stimulate concentrations in
    nucleus acumbens and other reward centers
  • Dopamine antagonists increase alcohol intake in
    rats, e.g.., more alcohol is required to achieve
    pleasurable response
  • Dopamine agonists decrease alcohol intake in rats
    , e.g.., less alcohol is required to achieve
    pleasurable response

9
Neurochemical Mechanisms of Alcohol Reinforcement
  • Serotonin
  • alcohol increases serotonin concentrations in
    certain regions of the brain
  • brain of alcohol preferring rats contain lower
    concentrations of serotonin than wild type rats.
  • Serotonin agonists reduce alcohol intake

10
Neurochemical Mechanisms of Alcohol Reinforcement
  • Endogenous Opiates
  • alcohol stimulates release of enkephalins and
    endorphinsproducing euphoria and pain
    attenuation
  • Opiate receptor antagonists reduce the
    reinforcing effects of alcohol

11
Genetic Evidence of the Biological Basis for
Problem Drinking -- Animal Models
Are there demonstrable genetic differences
(biological differences) that might make some
individuals more prone to alcohol-seeking
behavior? Are some individuals less likely to
experience withdrawal? Tolerance? What is the
genetic evidence that such traits are inherited
and thus based in biological difference?
12
Alcohol Seeking Behavior
  • Alcohol Preferring (P) and Alcohol non-Preferring
    (NP) Rats
  • bred through repeated generations to maximally
    exhibit this behavior
  • P rats will do anything to get alcohol -- very
    strong positive reinforcement -- despite harm
  • Fast/Slow SMA Mice
  • Fast mice quickly respond to stimulatory effects
    of alcohol
  • Slow mice do not respond initially to the
    stimulatory effect
  • Slow mice develop tolerance to depressive effect
    after 31 days and then are Stimulated

13
Molecular Biol. Properties of P/NP
  • P/NP have comparative differences in LTW-4
    protein
  • LTW-4 Protein increases in both P and NP with
    increased alcohol consumption

14
Sensitivity to Sedative Properties of Alcohol
  • Long-Sleep/Short-Sleep mice
  • differ by righting reflex
  • LS loose righting reflex with 1/2 the alcohol
    level of SS
  • LS looses righting reflex with 1/30 the alcohol
    when admin. to Purkinge cells
  • Biochemical Differences
  • LS more sensitive to alcohol augmentation of GABA
    function
  • GABA receptor in LS mice has enhanced alcohol
    activation

15
Differences in Withdrawal/Dependence
  • Withdrawal-Seizure Prone(WSP) and
    Withdrawal-Seizure Resistant(WSR) mice
  • 10x more severe symptoms
  • no difference in sensitivity to other affects of
    alcohol including tolerance
  • Biochemical Differences
  • Must be Genetic Component to Dependence
  • Glutamate receptors increase with alcohol
    consumption
  • WSP have more hippocampal NMDA (glutamate)
    receptors

16
Tolerance
  • LS/SS tolerance differences
  • P/NP differ in tolerance
  • Biochemical Differences
  • Probably some combination of known
    differences--see earlier slides

17
End
18
What About Humans?
19
Genetic Evidence from Animal Models for a
Biological Cause of Problem Drinking
  • P rats Alcohol Preferring
  • NP rats Alcohol Avoiding
  • Fast Spontaneous Motor Activity mice
  • Slow Spontaneous Motor Activity mice

20
Suggestive Trends
  • 80 of alcoholics in inpatient treatment have
    close relative with an alcohol problem
  • Seven times greater risk among first-degree
    relatives of alcoholics than that of the general
    population

21
Goals of Genetic Investigations
  • Detect and Quantify effects of Genetic
    Determinants on Problem Drinking
  • Characterize Patterns of Inheritance
  • Identify Genes that Confer Vulnerability
  • Identify Factors other than Genes that affect
    pathogenesis of alcoholism
  • Locating Specific Genes on the Genome that Confer
    Susceptibility

22
Potential Benefits of Genetic Research Programs
  • Important implications for
  • Prevention
  • Early Detection
  • Treatment

23
Twin Studies Concordance rates for DSM-III
alcohol abuse/alcohol dependence among identical
and fraternal twins.
0.36 0.25
0.76 0.61
0.59 0.36
0.25 0.05
Pickens et al (1991) Heterogeneity in the
inheritance of alcoholism. A study of male
and female twins. Archives of General
Psychiatry, 48, p19-28
24
Swedish Adoption Studies
  • Incidence of Alcohol Problem among genetically
    unrelated individuals in same home environment
  • 2.5 fold increased risk for children of Alcoholic
    Parent
  • Type I -- most common, mild, adult onset,
    dependent on environment
  • Type II -- less comon, severe, in men, early
    onset, agressive behavior
  • Type III -- like Type II but lacks agressive
    behavior

25
Biochemical Risk Markers
  • Genes for serotonin transporter
  • Gene variant for GABA receptor
  • Gene for catechol-O-methyltransferase (enzyme for
    dopamine metabolism) Variant leading to increased
    susceptibility to pain and anxiety also high risk
    for alcohol problems
  • Variants of the µ-opioid receptor determine
    whether naltrexone is effective or not in
    treatment of alcoholism

26
Identifying Markers of Inherited Vulnerability
  • Electrophysiology Markers
  • Biochemical Markers
  • platelet monoamine oxidase and adenylate cyclase
    activities
  • rate of platelet serotonin uptake
  • Differences in Reactions to Alcohol
  • Low response to alcohol
  • alcohol-induced increase in baseline heart rate
  • alcohol-induced decreases in plasma prolactin and
    cortisol

27
Identifying Markers of Inherited Resistance
  • Oriental Asian Flushing

28
Temperament and Behavior
  • hyperactivity
  • hyperactivity and aggression
  • low attention span
  • task persistence
  • labile emotional expressivity
  • slow ability to calm oneself following stress
  • facile social behavior
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com