Title: Chapter 8 Opener
1Chapter 8 Opener
2Frequency of drug use
- 2002 survey of illicit drug use
- 19.5 million Americans 12 years old or older
- 8.3 of the population
- 71 million tobacco
- About 30
- 120 million alcohol
- About 50
- 16 million heavily (7)
3- 200 years ago there were few regulations on
drugs. None at the federal level - There were also fewer drugs
- Tobacco
- Alcohol
- Opium
4Factors contributing to modern views on drugs.
- 1) Alcohol temperance movement
- Benjamin Rush founded (late 1700s, early 1800s)
- Advocated abstaining from hard liquor
- Okay to have moderate beer or wine consumption
- Rush pointed out physiological consequences of
alcohol use - Also pointed out impairment of moral faculty
- Many still think of alcohol use negatively
- Also probably influenced peoples view of drug use
- Drug use criminal behavior
5- 2) Advances in chemistry as well as a major
advancement in drug delivery influenced the
potency of drugs - Opium was purified to morphine
- Coca was purified to cocaine
- Hypodermic syringe was invented in 1858.
- Allowed purified drugs to be injected directly
into blood stream - Civil war soldiers often developed opiate
addictions - Soldiers Disease
6- 3) increasing availability of purified drugs,
combined with lack of drug control laws led to
growing use in many forms. - Cocaine was a major ingredient in a variety of
tonics - Vin Mariani Wine with coca (1863)
- Coca cola (1886)
7- Heroin synthesized by Bayer laboratories
- Nonaddictive cough remedy
- Meant to substitute for codeine.
8- 4) Medicalization of drug addiction (second half
of twentieth century) - Addiction viewed as a disease
- Addicts should be treated by medical association
- Modern view continues
- Alcoholics anonymous (AA)
- Narcotics anonymous (NA)
- National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)
9Drugs and the law
- The federal government is strongly against
legalization or decriminalization of currently
illegal drugs. - Began with passage of the Pure Food and Drug Act
(1906) - Mandated accurate labeling
10Harrison Act (1914)
- Regulated the dispensing and use of opiates and
cocaine - Use only for medical purposes
- Pharmacists and physicians must be registered
with treasury dept. and keep records of their
inventory - Those selling the drug must pay a tax
- Patented medicines with small amounts of opiates
or cocaine remained legal.
11Consequences of Harrison Act
- Addiction not considered a disease at this point,
so patients that had been getting drugs from
physicians to maintain their addiction were cut
off. - Turned to the street
- drug prices sky rocketed
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13What is addiction?
- Early views focused on physical dependence
- Physical withdrawal symptoms
- Alcohol (Delirium Tremens)
- Opiates (kicking the habit cold turkey)
- Prescription meds?
14More recent view of addiction
- Compulsive drug seeking behavior
- Drug craving
- Chronic relapsing disorder
- Individuals are considered still addicted even
when in remission (drug-free period) - There are often relapses
- Drug use persists despite harmful consequences to
the addict - Physical
- Social
15- American Psychiatric Association has stopped
using the term addiction and addict in their
professional writing - Due to bad connotation
- Dirty heroin addicts
- Crack heads
- They use the term substance related disorders
- Two general disorders
- Substance Dependence (more severe)
- Substance Abuse
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18- Note that merely using a drug, even if it is
illegal, does not necessarily indicate a
substance related disorder - The use must be maladaptive
- There are also substance induced disorders
- Cocaine psychosis
- Amphetamines
19Progression of drug use
- Gateway theory
- Alcohol and cigarettes are gateways for marijuana
- Marijuana is gateway for other illicit drugs
20Box 8.1 The Gateway Theory of Drug Use
21Problems with Gateway Theory
- 1) Population studied is usually highschool
students - Given surveys
- Probably not hard-core users
- Hardcore users drop out.
- When heavy users of illegal drugs are studied it
has been shown that marijuana is often used prior
to other hard drugs - But marijuana is often used before alcohol and
tobacco.
22- 2) These studies are correlational
- Correlation does not imply causation
- Does the fact that marijuana use reliably
precedes the use of hard drugs mean that
marijuana use causes abuse of harder drugs? - What else could be playing a role?
23Continuum of drug use
- drug use also occurs along a continuum
- Some people that experiment with drugs do not
continue to substance abuse or dependence - Drugs are not instantly addictive
- Some people do
- Why some do and some dont is an important
research question. - Also people can move in both directions along the
continuum. - They dont necessarily have to fall farther and
farther into abuse. - They can move in a direction of less problematic
use or abstinence
248.5 Patterns of opioid drug use over a 20-year
period in ten heroin addicts
- This slide supports the view that addiction is a
chronic relapsing disorder - It also shows how many drug users move along the
continuum of drug use
25Which drugs are most addictive?
- Two sets of standards
- Legal standards
- Set by the Controlled Substances Act of 1970
- Five different schedules of drugs
- Note that alcohol and nicotine are not on the
drug schedule - Can be bought without prescription
- Scientific standards
- Reflected by expert views of addictive potential
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27- Two experts rated abuse potential of various
drugs - Jack Henningfield, formerly Chief of Clinical
Pharmacology at the Addiction Research Center at
NIDA - Neil Benowitz, addiction researcher at University
of California at San Francisco
- 1) presence and severity of withdrawal
- 2) how reinforcing the drug is (from human and
animal studies) - 3) the degree of tolerance produced by the drugs
- 4) degree of dependence
- Difficulty quitting
- Relapse
- 5) degree of intoxication
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29- Overall rankings
- Heroin (1.9)
- Alcohol (2.5)
- Cocaine (2.65)
- Nicotine (3.35)
- Caffeine (5.0)
- Marijuana (5.4)
- Two of the top 4 substances are legal
- Marijuana is lowest on this list, but a schedule
1 drug. - Keep in mind long term consequences were not
included.
- Note that low numbers indicate the most serious
abuse potential - Also note how closely the two experts rated the
drugs on the various measures
30Models of Drug Abuse and Dependence
- The physical dependence model
- Once physically dependent, attempts at abstinence
lead to unpleasant withdrawal symptoms - Thus, the person is motivated to take the drug
again. - Negative RF
- Take drug (behavior)
- Remove withdrawal (consequence)
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32- Wikler (1980) posited that withdrawal could be
classically conditioned - Certain contexts where drug seeking behavior
occurs can become associated with withdrawal. - They are there to find drugs, so they are likely
in an abstinence state - Thus, an addict could be free from acute drug
withdrawal, but experience withdrawal exposed to
the right environmental stimuli (CS) - Note that drug craving is part of the CR
33- Cocaine dependent individuals show increased
desire to get high, and craving for cocaine after
seeing a video of a person obtaining and then
smoking crack cocaine. - Blue lines are controls (never taken cocaine).
- Notice that the y-axis represents a change score.
The cravings went up when confronted with drug
stimuli
34Critique of physical dependence model
- 1) Some drugs do not cause physical dependence
but remain highly addictive - Cocaine
- 2) The model does a good job of explaining drug
taking behavior after a person has become
dependent - but doesnt do a good job of explaining the drug
use that led to dependence in the first place
35- 3) Has difficulty explaining high levels of
relapse following drug detoxification. - Wikler attempts to explain using his conditioned
withdrawal model - Evidence that withdrawal symptoms associated with
environmental stimuli causing renewed drug use is
limited. - Drug cravings are often considered more
psychological, rather than a physical withdrawal
symptom.
36Positive Reinforcement model
- Unlike the physical dependence model that focused
on negative reinforcement this model focuses on
positive reinforcement. - A lot of animal work has shown the reinforcing
properties of drugs - One very important procedure is
self-administration
374.23 Rat in an operant chamber
384.24 The drug self-administration method
39Progressive-ratio schedule
- Allows researchers to measure how reinforcing
different drugs (or different doses of drugs) are
relative to one another - 1) CRF schedule (continuous reinforcement)
- Every bar press drug injection
- 2) once well trained you can test with a
progressive ratio - Keep increasing the FR (fixed ratio) required to
get the injection - Determine break point
40- Most drugs that humans abuse will be
self-administered by animals. - If animals are given unlimited access to cocaine
they can take so much drug as to cause seizures - Dont eat
- Stop grooming
- Can die
- Most studies limit drug taking sessions to a few
hours per day.
41- Why are abused drugs rewarding?
- Hijack the reward pathway?
- Neural mechanisms of reward
- Discovered with intracranial self stimulation
(ICSS) - Olds and Milner (1954)
42- Interaction between drugs of abuse and ICSS
- Researchers determine how much current is
required to be rewarding (cause lever pressing) - The lower the threshold more sensitive reward
circuit - Drugs of abuse lower the threshold for ICSS
- Indicates that the drug is working on the same
neural pathway as the ICSS - Withdrawal increases threshold
- Analogous to negative mood states in human
withdrawal?
43- Drugs that acutely reduce the threshold for ICSS
also increase synaptic DA levels in the nucleus
accumbens - Enhancing firing of VTA neurons
- Opiates
- Nicotine ethanol
- THC
- Inhibiting reuptake or increasing release at
terminals - Cocaine
- amphetamine.
44- Keep in mind that DA release in the nucleus
accumbens is not necessarily the only factor in
the rewarding properties of drugs - Lesion mesolimbic pathway (VTA-NA)
- 6-OHDA in NA
- Abolishes self administration of cocaine and
amphetamine - Animals will still self administer alcohol and
heroin. - For some drugs there is more to reward than just
the mesolimbic pathway
45Incentive-sensitization model of drug addiction
- Distinguishes between drug liking (high) and drug
wanting (craving) - With repeated drug use drug wanting increases,
even though drug liking does not increase (and
may even decrease). - According to the model, different brain regions
control liking and wanting. - Repeated drug use sensitizes wanting
- No sensitization and perhaps tolerance to liking.
- Perhaps mesolimbic pathway is more important for
drug wanting than drug liking? - The brain changes associated with drug wanting
are long lasting. Leading to high relapse rates
46Opponent Process model
- This was originally posited as a general approach
to understanding motivation - Strong emotions one way will cause swings of
strong emotions the other way when the stimulus
is removed - Jump out of airplane strong sense of fear
- Followed by intense pleasurable sense of relief
when you land safely. - Drugs intense pleasurable high followed by
unpleasant withdrawal - Euphoria followed by depression
47- a process manifest affective episode
- b process underlying opponent process
- a process last for the duration of the episode
- Time falling from plane
- b process starts a little later and lasts longer
- a-b top part of the following graph.
- Indicates the swing in affect just after the
stimulus is removed - Land on the ground
48- After many times jumping from the plane
- a process is reduced
- b process is enhanced
- Thus, the pleasure of jumping from a plane is
greater and the fear much reduced - How would this work with drugs as an example?
- Similar to incentive sensitization model?
49Critique of incentive-sensitization and
opponent-process models
- They are the more modern view
- Both preferable to physical dependence and
positive reinforcement models. - Incentive sensitization probably does a better
job of explaining drug craving - Opponent-process seems to do a better job of
explaining the dysphoria associated with
abstinence
50The disease model of addiction
- Widely accepted
- World health organization
- American medical association
- Two kinds of disease models
- Susceptibility models
- Exposure models
51- Susceptibility models
- Inherited suceptibility to uncontrolled drug use.
- Loss of control - start drinking cant stop
until intoxicated - Exposure models
- Emphasize the brain alterations that occur with
prolonged drug use.
52Critique of disease model
- There is no laboratory test that can identify the
underlying cause of the disease. - It is defined only by its symptoms
- This is an old argument in the psychiatric and
psychological literature - Do we treat underlying causes
- Cant simply treat symptoms, have to find the
underlying reasons - Freud
- Do we treat symptoms
- If you cure the symptoms is there still a
disease? - Behaviorists
- Many psychological disorders are defined simply
by their symptoms. - DSM IV TR
- We do not know what causes the disorder
53Critique of disease model cont.
- Use of drugs occurs on a continuum. There is no
clear distinction between nonaddictive behavior
and addictive behavior - Obesity
- Blood pressure
- The cut off points are somewhat arbitrary
54Toward a comprehensive model of drug abuse and
dependence
- Pulling everything together
- It is important to understand what leads to
initial experimentation with drugs - These factors may be very different from what
maintains drug use later in life - It can take years to decades for dependence to
develop - Implies initial use factors different from abuse
factors
55Three factors involved in experimental drug use
- According to Petraitis et al. (1995).
- Three types of factors
- Social/interpersonal
- Cultural/attidudinal
- Intrapersonal
- Three levels of influence
- Proximal
- most direct influence
- Distal
- Not as predictive of immediate drug use as
proximal, but more so than ultimate. - Ultimate
- not immediate influence but may determine long
term risk
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57Factors involved in the development and
maintenance of drug use
- Drug related factors
- Reinforcing effects of the drug
- Examples
- Euphoria
- Mood elevation
- Relief from withdrawal
- Relief from anxiety
- Functional enhancement
- Ritalin and Adderall (study drugs)
58Drug related factors cont.
- Discriminative subjective effects of drugs
- Produce internal states that can serve as cues to
control animal behavior - Used to study how similar drugs are for an
animal. - Train to nose poke with amphetamine, but not
saline - Test with cocaine?
- Considered analogous to the subjective effects
that people experience when they take a drug.
59Drug related factors cont.
- Certain environments may become associated with
drug states - The person or animal expects to feel drug effects
in that environment - Could contribute to drug seeking behavior
- Soldiers addicted to heroin in Vietnam often
stopped taking the drug when they returned home. - Apparently with less difficulty
- Perhaps because removed from the environmental
cues associated with the drug
60Drug related factors cont.
- Aversive affects of drugs
- We all know that drugs can have aversive effects
- Alcohol hangover
- Cocaine anxiety
- These effects apparently do not override the
positive effects - Heroin good sick
61Risk Factors
- Stress and the ability of the person to cope with
stress - People under stress often relapse
- Animals will increase self administration under
stress - Comorbidity
- Often psychological disorders are associated with
increased substance use.
62Risk Factors cont.
- Familial and sociocultural influences
- Adult children of alcoholics increased risk
- Social facilitation alcohol with friends
- Escape from social responsibilities
- Group solidarity some cultures identify with
heavy alcohol use - Irish?
- Russians?
- Drug subculture?
- Reject straight lifestyle and social norms.
- Genes
- Inherited characteristics may influence abuse
potential
63Protective factors
- How to help abusers remain abstinent
- Avoid drug related cues
- New social groups
- Life structure
648.17 Factors involved in the development and
maintenance of compulsive drug use