Title: Trends in Biomedical Science
1Trends in Biomedical Science
- Diseases of the Brain 1
- Non-prescription drugs
2- We will study some brain diseases.
- I will try to present them in order of their
importance to society.
3- We will study some brain diseases.
- I will try to present them in order of their
importance to society. - For this reason we will study non-prescription
drugs first.
4- References
- Brain facts http//www.sfn.org/index.aspx?pagename
brainfacts - especially Neural Disorders Advances and
Challenges - Drugs alter the Brains Reward Pathway
- http//learn.genetics.utah.edu/content/addiction/d
rugs/index.html
5- Facts and figures
- We know what can be done to help reduce
psychoactive substance use. - We know what needs to be done to help reduce
psychoactive substance use.
6- Facts and figures (US figures)
-
- At least 15.3 million persons have drug use
disorders. - Injecting drug use is reported in 148 countries,
of which 120 report HIV infection among this
population.
7- The leading causes of death in 2000 were tobacco
(435 000 deaths 18.1 of total US deaths), poor
diet and physical inactivity (400 000 deaths
16.6), and alcohol consumption (85 000 deaths
3.5). Other actual causes of death were
microbial agents (75 000), toxic agents (55 000),
motor vehicle crashes (43 000), incidents
involving firearms (29 000), sexual behaviors (20
000), and illicit use of drugs (17 000). - JAMA AH Mokdad et al Actual Causes of Death in
the United States, 2000
8- The following is an example of the Australian
problem. - Australia has half the size of Koreas population.
9- The costs of tobacco, alcohol and illicit drug
abuse to Australian society in 2004/05
10Disease Number Yearly Cost
Drugs - Illegal 22,000,000 276,000,000,000
Drugs Nicotine (US) 70,000,000 138,000,000,000
Drugs Nicotine Korea 3,920,000,000,000 won
Drugs - Alcohol (US) 14,000,000 185,000,000,000
11Disease Number Yearly Cost
Drugs - Illegal 22,000,000 276,000,000,000
Drugs Nicotine (US) 70,000,000? 138,000,000,000
Drugs Nicotine Korea 3,920,000,000,000 won
Drugs - Alcohol (US) 14,000,000 185,000,000,000
Alzheimer 5,000,000 100,000,000,000
Pain 97,000,000 100,000,000,000
Major Depression 70,000,000,000
Trauma 1,400,000 60,000,000,000
Stroke 700,000 51,200,000,000
Dyslexia 60,000,000
Anxiety 24,800,000
12(No Transcript)
13(No Transcript)
14- Smoking in South Korea is the leading preventable
cause of death in the country, with more than
40,000 people dying every year from smoking-relate
d diseases.
15- Lets look at constructing a pedigree for
possible addiction to nicotine. - http//learn.genetics.utah.edu/content/addiction/p
i/ - And here we can look at finding candidate genes.
- http//learn.genetics.utah.edu/content/addiction/c
andidate/
16- Drug abuse is one of the worlds most serious
health problems. - In the US, 9, more than 22 million people, abuse
drugs on a regular basis. - Recent estimates show that the abuse of drugs,
including alcohol and nicotine, costs more than
276 billion each year.
17- If continued long enough, drug abuse often
defined as harmful drug use can eventually
alter the structure and chemical makeup of the
brain, producing a true brain disorder. - This disorder is called drug addiction or drug
dependence.
18- Drug addiction is a pathological desire for
drugs, such that drug seeking and drug-taking
behaviors take up too much of an persons time
and thoughts and these behaviors continue despite
many bad consequences. - Addicts also have difficulty controlling
frequency of use and stopping use, despite
wanting to.
19- Abused drugs alter the ways neurotransmitters
carry their messages from neuron to neuron. - Some drugs mimic neurotransmitters, whereas
others block them. - Still others alter the way neurotransmitters are
released or inactivated. - In all cases, the brain reward system is
activated because drugs alter the chemical
messages sent among neurons in this circuit.
20(No Transcript)
21- The reward circuit is at the heart of our mental
activity and guides all our behaviors. This
circuit is complex, but it contains a central
link that is very important.
22- This link consists of the nerve connections
between two particular small groups of neurons.
One of these groups is located in the ventral
tegmental area (VTA), and the other in the
nucleus accumbens.
23- The chemical messenger that makes the connections
between these two groups of neurons is dopamine.
This is the site where most drugs act and cause
dependencies.
24- Dopamine is a chemical messenger
(neurotransmitter) that is not very common in the
brain. Only 0.3 of the neurons in the brain
produce dopamine. These neurons play an essential
role in many of our behaviors.
25- Other parts of the brain connect directly
to dopamine neurons
26- Green dots represent neurons providing inputs to
dopamine neurons in the ventral tegmental area
(VTA, processes rewards), while red dots
represent neurons providing inputs to substantia
nigra (SNc, motor control) dopamine neurons.
27- Some dopamine-producing neurons act when the
person experiences desire or pleasure.
28- The Reward Pathway Reinforces Behavior
- The following information about the brains
rewards system comes from http//learn.genetics.ut
ah.edu/content/addiction/rewardbehavior/
29- The reward system reinforces behavior.
30- The brain is divided into several regions that
are each responsible for performing different
functions. In the center of the brain is the
reward pathway, which is responsible for driving
our feelings of motivation, reward and behavior.
31- The reward pathway makes us feel good when we do
behaviors that are necessary for our survival. - These behaviors include eating, drinking and sex.
32- The reward pathway connects to several other
important areas of the brain. - These connections bring information about what is
happening outside of the body, and strengthen
brain circuits that control good behavior.
33- Imagine you havent eaten all day and someone
gives you a nice sandwich. Your five senses
gather information from your surroundings and
send signals to the brain letting it know that
there is a delicious sandwich in front of you.
34- In another part of your brain is the memory that
when you eat a sandwich, you will no longer be
hungry and you will feel good. Based on this
information, the brain tells the body to pick up
the sandwich and eat it.
35- The senses tell the brain that the body is eating
some good tasting food and the stomach is filling
up. Special neurons in the reward pathway release
the chemical dopamine. The release of dopamine
gives you a little push of pleasure. Thats your
reward for eating the sandwich.
36- In addition to making you feel good when you
engage in good behavior, the reward pathway is
responsible for trying to make sure you repeat
the behavior whenever possible. It does this by
connecting to regions of the brain that control
memory and behavior.
37- When the reward pathway signals brain regions
involved in memory, it enables the brain to
create the memory that eating food makes you feel
good. This increases the chance that you will eat
the food again.
38- When the reward pathway signals the brains motor
center, it strengthens the neuron networks for
behaviors that help you achieve your reward. In
this case, picking up the sandwich, chewing it
up, and swallowing it.
39- By giving us a push of pleasure, the reward
pathway works to make us repeat behaviors which
are necessary for survival.
40- A central group of structures is common to the
actions of all drugs. - These structures include a collection of
dopamine-containing neurons found in the ventral
tegmental area. - These neurons are connected to the nucleus
accumbens and other areas, such as the prefrontal
cortex.
41- Cocaine exerts its effects mainly through this
central system.
42- Opiates act in this system and many other
regions, including the amygdala, that normally
use opioid peptides. - Opioids are naturally occurring brain chemicals
that induce the same actions as drugs, such as
heroin and morphine.
43- Alcohol activates the core reward system and
additional structures throughout the brain
because it acts where GABA and glutamate are used
as neurotransmitters. - GABA and glutamate are widely distributed,
including in the cortex, hippocampus, amygdala,
and nucleus accumbens.
44- Common Features of Addiction.
- Many substances found in nature leaves, seeds,
and roots of plants, and some animal products
had medicinal qualities.
45- Common Features of Addiction.
- Some of these produced pleasure when eaten,
drunk, or smoked. Perhaps the first one that
people discovered, is ethyl alcohol.
46- For example,
- Asians - the opium poppy and the tea plant,
- Indians - cannabis,
- South Americans - coca leaves and coffee beans,
- North Americans - the tobacco plant.
47- Many of these drugs are poisons that protect the
plants from animals that eat them. - People learned how to take these drugs in amounts
that would not make them ill. - The effects of these drugs on the brain rewards
us for taking the drug.
48(No Transcript)
49- Agonist something which makes it work better or
more - Antagonist something which makes it work less
50- GABA RECEPTORS GABA (gamma-aminobutyric acid)
affects the GABA receptors. - These receptors are macromolecular complexes with
several sub-units. - The GABA-A receptor is 5 sub-units surrounding a
channel for chloride ions (and bromide ions).
51- The GABA-A receptor also has secondary binding
sites for molecules that modulate GABAs effects.
Examples are benzodiazepines, barbiturates,
convulsants, steroids, and alcohol.
52- These molecules change GABAs efficiency by
changing the protein shape of the GABA-A complex.
The size of the channel changes, and the neurons
permeability to chloride ions. Negative chloride
ions then hyperpolarize the neuron.
53- The result is an inhibition of neuronal activity
and a general anxiolytic effect. - Treatment with benzodiazepines helps to reduce
anxiety by increasing the effect of GABA, and by
making the chloride channel open more frequently.
54- However, in the absence of GABA at the primary
site on the GABA-A receptor, the modulating
molecules have no effect on the neurons chloride
permeability.
55- Addictive drugs have reinforcing effects.
- These effects include activating the reward
mechanism. - The reward strengthens the action that was just
made. - If the drug was taken by a fast-acting route, the
last action will be taking the drug, so that will
be reinforced.
56- Drug users prefer heroin to morphine because
heroin has a faster effect. - Heroin is converted to morphine as soon as it
reaches the brain. But heroin is more lipid
soluble, it passes through the bloodbrain
barrier more rapidly, and its effects on the
brain are felt sooner than those of morphine.
57- The biggest reinforcement occurs when drugs
produce sudden changes in the activity of the
reward mechanism slow changes are much less
reinforcing. - A person taking an addictive drug seeks a sudden
rush produced by a fast-acting drug.
58- Different methods of delivery smoking,
injecting, or snorting largely influence how
quickly a drug reaches the brain. - http//learn.genetics.utah.edu/content/addiction/d
elivery/
59- Food for a hungry animal, water for a thirsty
one, or sexual contact have one effect in common
they cause the release of dopamine in the nucleus
accumbens.
60- The nucleus accumbens is an important part of the
reward system.
61- Addictive drugs including amphetamine, cocaine,
opiates, nicotine, alcohol, PCP, and cannabis
trigger the release of dopamine in the nucleus
accumbens. - Different drugs stimulate the release of dopamine
in different ways.
62- The first changes appear to take place in the
ventral tegmental area (VTA). - A single dose of an addictive drug (cocaine,
amphetamine, morphine, alcohol, or nicotine)
increased the strength of excitatory synapses on
dopaminergic (DA) neurons in the VTA in mice. - This change is by putting more AMPA receptors
into the postsynaptic membrane of the DA neurons. - Dopaminergic means related to dopamine
63- When people first take an addictive drug, they
experience pleasure. - If they continue to take the drug and become
addicted a different part of the brain becomes
developed.
64- Then they take the drug, not for the pleasure,
but because drug-related cues means they want to
seek drugs. - Drug addicts are aroused and motivated when they
are seeking a drug but are withdrawn and dull
when they are in a drug-free environment.
65- Most people who take addictive drugs do not
become addicted. - The chance of becoming addicted is a function of
heredity, age (adolescents are most vulnerable),
and environment (such as access to drugs and
stressful life events).
66- The role of the prefrontal cortex in judgment,
risk taking, and control of inappropriate
behaviors may explain why adolescents are much
more vulnerable to drug addiction than are
adults.
67- Adolescence is a time of fast and large change in
the brainparticularly in the prefrontal cortex.
68- Before these circuits reach their adult form,
adolescents are more likely to display increased
levels of impulsive, novelty-driven, risky
behavior, including experimentation with alcohol,
nicotine, and illicit drugs.
69- Addiction in adults most often begins in
adolescence or young adulthood. - Approximately 50 percent of cases of addiction
begin between the ages of 15 and 18, and very few
begin after age 20.
70- A behavior that turns off (or reduces) an bad
stimulus will be reinforced. - This phenomenon is known as negative
reinforcement.
71- Negative Reinforcement
- the removal or reduction of an bad stimulus that
depends on a particular response, with an
increase in the frequency of that response
72- People who abuse some drugs become physically
dependent on the drug that is, they show
tolerance and withdrawal symptoms. - Tolerance is the decreased sensitivity to a drug
that comes from its continued use the user must
take larger and larger amounts of the drug for it
to be effective.
73- If a person has taken an opiate regularly enough
to develop tolerance, that person will have
withdrawal symptoms if he stops taking the drug. - Withdrawal symptoms are the opposite of the
effects of the drug itself. - The effects of heroin feeling good,
constipation, and relaxation lead to the
withdrawal effects of feeling bad, cramping and
diarrhea, and agitation.
74- Positive reinforcement supports drug taking.
- Reduction of withdrawal effects can maintain
someones drug addiction. - The withdrawal effects are unpleasant, but as
soon as the person takes some of the drug, these
effects go away, producing negative reinforcement.
75- Negative reinforcement could also explain some
drug addictions. - If a stressed person is suffering from some
unpleasant feelings and then takes a drug that
eliminates these feelings, the persons drug -
taking behavior is likely to be reinforced. - For example, alcohol can relieve feelings of
anxiety. - If a person finds himself in a situation that
makes him anxious, he might find that having a
drink or two makes him feel much better.
76- The presence of drug-related stimuli can start
cravings and drug-seeking behavior. - Stressful situations can cause former drug
addicts to relapse. - These effects have been observed in rats that had
previously learned to self-administer cocaine or
heroin.
77- For example, put new rats with rats that had been
trained to win fights. - After being defeated by the fighting rats, the
socially stressed rats became more sensitive to
the effects of cocaine and showed
self-administration of larger amounts of the drug.
78- Stress that occurs early in life can have
long-lasting effects. - Infant rats were stressed by isolating them from
their mothers and littermates for one hour per
day for eight days. - When these rats were given the opportunity in
adulthood to inject themselves with cocaine, they
quickly acquired the habit and took more of the
drugs than did control rats that had not been
stressed.
79(No Transcript)
80- An important link between stressful experiences
and drug craving is provided by corticotropin
releasing hormone, or CRH.
81(No Transcript)
82- CRH helps make bad effects on health produced by
stress, and helps development of anxiety
disorders. - Just as giving a drug or stimuli previously
associated with drug-taking behavior can cause
relapse, so can stressful experiences
83- Summary
- Addictive drugs are those whose reinforcing
effects are so strong that some people who are
exposed to them dont like not taking the drugs
and whose lives become organized around taking
them. - Fortunately, most people who are exposed to drugs
do not become addicted to them.
84- If a person regularly takes some addictive drugs,
the effects of the drug show tolerance, and the
person must take increasing doses to get the same
effect. - If the person then stops taking the drug,
withdrawal effects, opposite to the primary
effects of the drug, will occur. - However, withdrawal effects are not the cause of
addiction the addiction of a drug is related to
its ability to reinforce drug-taking behavior.
85- The drugs themselves change the brain in complex
ways, leading to symptoms of addiction. - The brain regions that are changed by drugs
include the brain reward system as well as brain
regions involved in executive functions and
judgment. - These brain systems control behavior and are used
in making decisions.
86- The process of becoming addicted is influenced by
many factors. - Genetic susceptibility and environmental factors,
such as stress, alter the way that people respond
to drugs. - The types of the drugs themselves, how quickly
they enter the brain, also play a role in
addiction.
87- The development of tolerance the progressive
need for a higher drug dose to achieve the same
effect varies in different people, as does drug
dependence the adaptive physiological state
that results in withdrawal symptoms when drug use
stops.
88- Tolerance and dependence are standard responses
of the brain and body to the presence of drugs. - However, addiction requires that these occur
while a motivational form of dependence the
feeling that a person cant live without a drug
also is developing.
89- It is important to understand how these many
factors interact to push individuals to
addiction and how to protect them. - This understanding will lead to new therapies.
90- Not all drugs increase dopamine levels in the
brain in the same way. - Some substances imitate natural neuromediators
and take their place on their receptors.
Morphine, for example, binds to the receptors for
endorphin (a natural "morphine" produced by the
brain), while nicotine binds to the receptors for
acetylcholine.
91- Other substances increase the secretion of
natural neuromediators. Cocaine, for example,
mainly increases the amount of dopamine in the
synapses, while ecstasy mainly increases the
amount of serotonin. - Still other substances block a natural
neuromediator. Alcohol, for example, blocks the
NMDA receptors.
92- Alcohol
- Nearly 14 million people (US) abuse alcohol or
are alcoholic. - Fetal alcohol syndrome, affecting about 0.5 to 3
of every 1,000 babies born in the United States,
is the leading preventable cause of mental
retardation. - Cirrhosis and other liver diseases are
responsible for more than 25,000 deaths each
year. - The annual cost of alcohol abuse and addiction is
estimated at 185 billion.
93- Alcohol activates the endogenous opioid system so
that susceptible individuals may feel an opioid
like euphoria from their own endorphins when they
drink. - Opiate receptors are involved in the
dopamine-reward activation of alcohol. - Naltrexone, a medication developed for heroin
addiction, is used to treat alcoholics.
94- Here is an animation of the effects of alcohol.
- http//thebrain.mcgill.ca/flash/i/i_03/i_03_m/i_03
_m_par/i_03_m_par_alcool.htmldrogues - Describe what happens and suggest why.
95- Ethanol, the active ingredient in alcoholic
beverages, reduces anxiety, tension, and
inhibitions. - In low doses, it may act as a stimulant, whereas
at higher doses, it acts as a depressant. - It alters mood and behavior.
- It can also cause heat loss and dehydration.
96- The drug, which is easily absorbed into the
bloodstream and the brain, affects several
neurotransmitter systems. - Alcohols interaction with the gamma-aminobutyric
acid (GABA) receptor can calm anxiety, impair
muscle control, and delay reaction time.
97- At higher doses, alcohol also decreases the
function of N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA) receptors
that recognize the neurotransmitter glutamate. - This interaction can cloud thinking and
eventually lead to coma.
98- Nicotine
- In 2003, more than 70 million people smoked, at
least occasionally, making nicotine one of the
most widely abused substances. - Tobacco kills more than 430,000 U.S. citizens
each year more than alcohol, cocaine, heroin,
homicide, suicide, car accidents, fire, and AIDS
combined.
99- Tobacco use is the leading preventable cause of
death in the United States. - Smoking is responsible for approximately 7
percent of total U.S. health-care costs, an
estimated 80 billion each year. - The direct and indirect costs of smoking are
estimated at more than 138 billion per year.
100- In Korea, the major preventable health problem is
tobacco. - The smoking rate for women was the lowest in the
OECD area in 2007 at 5, the rate for men was the
third highest at 47.
101- Smoking is associated with high rates of lung and
stomach cancer, making a significant cost for
Korea. - The estimated cost of diseases due to smoking in
Korea in 2001 was a total of 3.92 trillion won
3.72 trillion won for males and 0.20 trillion won
for females.
102- Nicotine acts through the cholinergic nicotinic
receptor. - Nicotine can act as both a stimulant and a
sedative. - Nicotine stimulates the adrenal glands, and the
resulting discharge of epinephrine causes a
sudden release of glucose with an increase in
blood pressure, respiration, and heart rate.
103- Nicotine also suppresses insulin output from the
pancreas, which means that smokers are always
slightly hyperglycemic. - In addition, nicotine releases dopamine in the
brain regions that control motivation, which is
one reason that people continue to smoke.
104- Here is an animation of the effects of nicotine
- http//thebrain.mcgill.ca/flash/i/i_03/i_03_m/i_03
_m_par/i_03_m_par_nicotine.htmldrogues
105- Replacements, such as nicotine gum, transdermal
patches, nasal sprays, and inhalers are equally
effective in treating nicotine addiction. - These are used to relieve withdrawal symptoms and
produce less severe problems than tobacco-based
systems.
106- The first non-nicotine prescription drug,
bupropion, an antidepressant, has been approved
for use as a pharmacological treatment for
nicotine addiction.
107- Varenicline for smoking cessation, directly
interacts with the cholinergic nicotinic receptor
and prevents nicotine from activating the brains
reward circuit. - Varenicline is a good example of how basic
science research can lead to the production of
new medications.
108- HOW COCAINE AFFECTS THE BRAIN
- The basis for increased pleasure occurs at the
synapse. - Dopamine-containing neurons normally relay their
signals by releasing dopamine into many synapses.
- Dopamine crosses the synapse and fits into
receptors on the surface of the receiving cell. - This triggers an electrical signal that is
relayed through the receiver.
109- Then, to end the signal, dopamine molecules break
away from the receptors and are pumped back into
the nerve terminals that released them. - Cocaine molecules block the pump or
transporter, causing more dopamine to
accumulate in the synapse. - Pleasure circuits are stimulated again and again,
producing euphoria.
110(No Transcript)
111- Cocaine effects
- http//thebrain.mcgill.ca/flash/i/i_03/i_03_m/i_03
_m_par/i_03_m_par_cocaine.htmldrogues