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BIOLOGY OF ADDICTION:

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Title: BIOLOGY OF ADDICTION:


1
BIOLOGY OF ADDICTION
  • What Neuroscience Has to Tell Us About Addiction
    as a Brain Disorder

2
Daniel P Logan, M.D., FACEP, ABAM Florida
Recovery Center Addiction Medicine, Emergency
Medicine Assistant Professor, Dept. of
Psychiatry University of Florida College of
Medicine
3
ASAM Definition of ADDICTION
  • Addiction is a primary, chronic disease of brain
    reward, motivation, memory and related circuitry.
    Dysfunction in these circuits leads to
    characteristic biological, psychological, social
    and spiritual manifestationsaddiction often
    involves cycles of relapse and remission

4
Four Options to Explain Addiction
  • Brain Disorder
  • Matter of Will- Disorder of Choice
  • Bad Character
  • Self Medication

5
Rectal Cranial Inversion
6
Moral Weakness or Stigma View
weak willed
bad
irresponsible
depressed
immoral
7
Why observations make you think its not a
disease?
  • Looks like weak willed they should be able to
    stop if they put their mind to it
  • They caused it themselves
  • Your own experience with being able to stop drugs
    successfully
  • Consequences of use are immoral, sinful and bad
  • People should be aware that drugs are bad for
    them and should not have used them in the first
    place
  • Despite good conventional medical, psychiatric
    and religious care, addicts get worse
  • It hurts others
  • Prejudice your negative experience

8
What observations provide evidence that it is a
disease?
  • They seemed liked such normal people until they
    started using drugs
  • It tends to run in families
  • Not everyone who uses drugs becomes addicted
  • They use compulsively and cant stop even with
    their best efforts
  • Has predictable symptoms they get worse with
    time
  • Reasonable people would stop under those
    conditions
  • Some people like drugs and some dont

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ADDICTION IS A DISEASE OF THE BRAIN As other
diseases, it affects tissue function
Diseased Heart
Healthy Heart
Sources From the laboratories of Drs. N. Volkow
and H. Schelbert
13
VTA
Amphetamines Opiates THC PCP Ketamine Nicotine
Alcohol benzodiazepines barbiturates
Nucleus accumbens
Dopamine Pathways
14
NT Normal Functions
  • Dopamine (pleasure,


    learning)
  • Serotonin (emotional stability)
  • Norepinephrine
  • (behavioral physical activity)
  • Pleasure (hunger/thirst/sexual), attention,
    organization of thought, muscle control and motor
    function
  • Regulates mood, emotions, thought processes,
    sleep, and appetite
  • Energy, motivation, attention span, alertness,
    pleasure, assertiveness, confidence, heart rate,
    blood pressure, etc.

Glutamate and GABA
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How Drugs of Abuse Effect Dopamine
  • Inhibit Reuptake of Dopamine
  • Stimulate Dopamine transporter
  • Cocaine, Amphetamine, Methamphetamine, XTC
  • Modulate firing of Dopamine releasing cells by
    actions on GABA and Glutamate
  • Nicotine, alcohol, opiates, cannabis
  • Cocaine, Amphetamine, Methamphetamine, XTC

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Drugs, Brains,and Behavior The Science of
Addiction NIDA, March 2007
21
Initiation of Addiction
  • Adolescents
  • Risk taking
  • Novelty seeking
  • Responsive to peer pressure
  • Incomplete development of frontal regions
    involved in executive function

22
The developing brain..
What happens when you expose the developing brain
to drugs during adolescence??
23
Gateway Drug
24
Adolescent Brain Changes
  • Earlier drinking more likely to result in alcohol
    dependence independent of family hx (Grant 1998)
  • Exposure of alcohol may indeed cause alterations
    in brain chemistry. There are studies indicating
    heaving drinking during adolescence causes memory
    and neuropsychological changes (Brown, et al)
  • Alternative explanation that early use may simply
    be a marker for example high novelty seeking
    behavior which is associated with early use as
    well as a risk for alcohol dependence

25
Adolescent Brain Changes
  • Animal studies show that early exposure to
    alcohol results in longer term problems such as
    cognitive and behavioral problems
  • Stress during adolescence maybe important factor
    in causing predisposition to etoh adolescents
    perception of stress was associated with larger
    quantities of alcohol consumption
  • Remodeling of brain during adolescence
    especially noted in the dopaminergic setting

26
Genetics
  • Genes either increase risk or are protective
  • Persistent drug use leads to gene transcription
    modification-part of neuro-plasticity
  • Htrlb receptor gene absence greater attraction to
    cocaine and alcohol
  • Curl receptor gene presence makes less responsive
    to morphine
  • ALDH2 if two copies less likely to develop
    alcoholism

27
Genetics
  • Twin studies in alcohol
  • Sway study of sons of alcoholics
  • If have one alcoholic parent 3-4 times increase
    risk of alcoholism

28
ALLOSTASIS
  • Homeostasis feedback-Allostasis feed forward
  • State of chronic deviation of regulatory system
    from normal i.e. homeostasis
  • The New Normal
  • I dont even get high anymore
  • Brain adaptation to persistent drug exposure- NOT
    the same as tolerance

29
Tolerance
  • Tolerance- defined by either of the following
  • A need for markedly increased amounts of the
    substance to achieve intoxication or desired
    effect
  • markedly diminished effect with continued use of
    the same amount of the substance

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WITHDRAWAL
  • Withdrawal- the predictable constellation of
    signs and symptoms following the abrupt
    discontinuation of, or rapid decrease in, the
    consumption of a drug used consistently for a
    period of time.

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Effects of Withdrawal
  • Decrease in Dopamine levels
  • Decrease in response to normally rewarding
    stimuli
  • Increase in stress system elevated CRF
  • Significant increase in anxiety and dysphoria

35
Craving
  • NOT just wanting or liking something
  • Im craving a Starbucks about now
  • A MIDBRAIN (limbic system) process involving both
    memory and emotion
  • Similar to hunger and thirst
  • Previously neutral stimuli take on drug related
    significance

36
The Memory of Drugs
Amygdalanot lit up
Amygdalaactivated
Front of Brain
Back of Brain
Nature Video
Cocaine Video
37
"People, places and things..."
38
RELAPSE
  • Re institution of drug taking
  • Persistence of dysregulation of reward system
  • Length of dysfunction related to drug and person
  • Triggered by
  • Drug re exposure- may be other drug of abuse-
    need not be DOC
  • Emotional state
  • Stress

39
Differing Drug Effects
  • Nicotine appears to have very long lasting and
    strong persistence of midbrain sensitivity to
    nicotine re-exposure
  • Methamphetamine, XTC, bath salts- significant
    destruction of neurons both midbrain and cortex

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RECOVERY IS THE ANSWER
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Daniel P Logan, M.D., FACEP, ABAM Florida
Recovery Center Addiction Medicine, Emergency
Medicine Assistant Professor, Dept. of
Psychiatry University of Florida College of
Medicine dlogan_at_ufl.edu 352.265.5549
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