Cannabis sativa - Bakersfield College

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Transcript Cannabis sativa - Bakersfield College

Chapter 15
Drug Addiction and the Brain’s
Reward Circuits
Chemicals That Harm with
Pleasure
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Copyright © 2009 Allyn & Bacon
Basic Principles of Drug
Action
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Psychoactive drugs – drugs that influence
subjective experience and behavior by
acting on the nervous system
Drug administration – route of administration
influences the rate at which and the degree
to which the drug reaches its site of action
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Drug Administration
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Ingestion – oral route
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Easy and relatively safe
Absorption via digestive tract is unpredictable
Injection – bypasses digestive tract
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Subcutaneously (SC) – under the skin
Intramuscularly (IM) – into large muscles
Intravenously (IV) – into veins, drug delivered
directly to brain
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Drug Administration (continued)
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Inhalation – tobacco and marijuana
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Absorbed through capillaries in lungs
Absorption through mucous membranes
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Nose, mouth, rectum
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Mechanisms of Drug Action
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In order for a psychoactive drug to have an
effect, it must get to the brain – it must pass
through the blood-brain barrier
Action of most drugs terminated by
enzymes in the liver – drug metabolism
Small amounts may also be excreted in
urine, sweat, feces, breath, and mother’s
milk
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Drug Tolerance
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Decreased sensitivity to a drug as a
consequence of exposure to it
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Cross tolerance – exposure to one drug can
produce tolerance to similar drugs
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Shift in the dose-response curve to right
Example: alcohol and benzodiazepines
Tolerance often develops to some effects
and not others
More than one form of tolerance
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Drug Tolerance (continued)
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Drug Tolerance (continued)
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Metabolic
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Less drug is getting to the site of action
Functional
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Decreased responsiveness at the site of action,
fewer receptors, decreased efficiency of binding
at receptors, receptors less responsive
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Drug Withdrawal Effects and
Physical Dependence
Seen when drug use is terminated
 Symptoms are the opposite of the drug’s
effects
 Body has made changes to compensate
for drug’s presence – functions normally
with the drug present
 Severity varies with drug and pattern of
use
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Addiction: What Is It?
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“Addicts” are those who continue to use a
drug despite its adverse effects on health
and social life
Addiction and physical dependence may
occur together or separately
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After withdrawal symptoms due to physical
dependence have subsided, addicts may still
crave the drug
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Five Commonly Abused Drugs
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Tobacco
Alcohol
Marijuana
Cocaine
Opiates
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Tobacco
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Nicotine – major psychoactive ingredient
About 70% of those who experiment with
smoking become addicted
Only about 20% of attempts to stop are
successful
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Effects of Long-Term Tobacco
Use
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Smoker’s syndrome – chest pain, labored
breathing, wheezing, coughing, increased
susceptibility to respiratory infections
Susceptible to various lethal lung disorders
– pneumonia, bronchitis, emphysema, lung
cancer
Quitting smoking by age 40 adds an
average of 9 years to life span
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Alcohol
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A depressant
Heritability estimate for alcohol addiction is
about 55%
Metabolic and functional tolerance develops
Attacks almost every tissue in the body
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Effects of Chronic Alcohol
Consumption
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Severe withdrawal in three phases:
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5-6 hrs post-drinking: tremors, nausea, sweating,
vomiting, etc.
15-30 hrs: convulsive activity
24-48 hrs: delirium tremens – may last 3-4 days
Korsakoff’s syndrome
Cirrhosis
Fetal alcohol syndrome (affects children of mothers
who are heavy alcohol users during pregnancy)
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Alcohol and the Brain
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Reduces flow of Ca2+ into neurons
Interferes with 2nd messenger systems
Disrupts GABAergic and glutaminergic
transmission
Triggers apoptosis
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Marijuana
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Cannabis sativa – common hemp plant
THC – primary psychoactive constituent –
although over 80 others are present
High doses impair short-term memory and
interfere with tasks involving multiple steps
Addiction potential is low
Negative effects of long-term use are far less
severe than those associated with alcohol
and tobacco
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Adverse Effects of Heavy
Marijuana Use
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Respiratory problems – cough, bronchitis,
asthma
Single large doses can trigger heart attacks
in susceptible individuals
No evidence that marijuana causes
permanent brain damage
Possible correlation between marijuana use
and schizophrenia, but no causal link has
been shown Copyright © 2009 Allyn & Bacon
Medicinal Uses of Marijuana
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Treats nausea
Blocks seizures
Dilates bronchioles of asthmatics
Decreases severity of glaucoma
Reduces some forms of pain
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Stimulants
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Increase neural and behavioral activity
Cocaine and its derivatives – commonly
abused
Crack – a potent, cheap, and smokable form
of cocaine
Cocaine is an effective local anesthetic
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Synthetic analogues procaine and lidocaine used
today
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Cocaine
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Cocaine binges or sprees may lead to
cocaine psychosis
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Looks like paranoid schizophrenia
While tolerance may develop to some effects
of cocaine, sensitization is seen to motor and
convulsive effects
Although highly addictive, withdrawal is
relatively mild
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Other Stimulants
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Stimulants are neurotoxins
Amphetamine (“speed”)
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Effects like cocaine – can produce psychosis
MDMA (“ecstasy”)
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Impairs dopaminergic and serotonergic function
in animal studies; human relevance unclear
Impairs executive function, inhibitory control, and
decision making (as shown by cortex and limbic
functional brain scan abnormalities)
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Opiates: Heroin and Morphine
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Morphine and codeine obtained from the
opium poppy
Opiates – these drugs and others with
similar structures or effects
Medicinal uses
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Analgesics (painkillers)
Treatment of cough and diarrhea
High risk of addiction
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Prevalence of drug use in the United States
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Biopsychological Theories of
Addiction
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Physical-dependence theory (dependence
due to pain of withdrawal) does not explain
why…
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addicts relapse long after detoxification
individuals begin using drugs
addictions develop to drugs that do not produce severe
withdrawal symptoms
Positive-incentive theories must explain…
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the difference between the hedonic value and the
positive incentive value of the drug
how a drug user becomes an addict
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Biopsychological Theories of
Addiction (continued)
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Incentive-sensitization theory
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Positive-incentive value (wanting) – the
anticipated pleasure associated with the action
(taking the drug)
Hedonic value (liking) – the actual pleasure
experienced
With drug use, the positive-incentive value
increases due to memory of the pleasure of early
drug experience; the hedonic value decreases
due to drug tolerance
Result: addicts crave drugs more and enjoy them
less
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Causes of Relapse
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Stress – drug use as a coping mechanism
Priming – a single exposure leads to a
relapse
Environmental cues
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Conditioned drug tolerance
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Returning to place where drugs once taken (or even
thinking about drug) causes conditioned compensatory responses (tolerance/withdrawal), craving, and
relapse
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Intracranial Self-Stimulation
and Brain “Pleasure Centers”
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Brain circuitry exists that reinforces
behaviors
Many species will work for stimulation of
brain “pleasure centers”
Discovered by Olds and Milner
Drug use may be reinforced by acting on
this circuitry
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A rat pressing a lever to obtain rewarding brain stimulation
Intracranial Self-Stimulation (ICSS)
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Mesotelencephalic Dopamine
System and Self-Stimulation
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Neurons projecting from two midbrain
areas to telencephalon
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Nigrostriatal pathway
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Substantia nigra neurons projecting to dorsal
striatum (degenerates in Parkinson’s disease)
Mesocorticolimbic pathway
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Ventral tegmental area neurons projecting to
cortical and limbic sites, including the nucleus
accumbens (the major “reward” pathway for
ICSS, natural rewards, and addictive drugs)
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Mesotelencephalic dopamine system of the human brain
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Mesocorticolimbic Pathway
and Reward
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Increase in dopamine release seen here in
self-stimulation studies
Dopamine agonists tend to increase selfstimulation and antagonists to decrease
Lesions here disrupt self-stimulation
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Two Ways to Measure Drug
Positive Incentive in Animals
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Drug self-administration through cannulas
to brain
Conditioned place-preference: lab animals
choose to spend more time in cage compartment where drugs were administered
than elsewhere
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Behavioral Preference Tests
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Dopamine and Drug Addiction
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Dopamine’s role suggested by selfstimulation studies
Dopamine antagonists interfere with
self-stimulation and reduce the
reinforcing effects of food
Nucleus accumbens appears to play a
primary role
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Nucleus Accumbens (NA) and
Drug Addiction
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Animals self-administer microinjections of
addictive drugs into NA
Microinjection of drugs into NA produce
conditioned placed preferences
Lesion NA or ventral tegmental area – no
drug self-administration or drug-related place
preference
Both self-administration of addictive drugs
and natural reinforcers result in increased
dopamine in the NA
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Dopamine Release in the NA:
Reward or Expectation of
Reward?
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Role is well-established
Cocaine acts as a dopamine agonist by
binding to dopamine transporters and
blocking reuptake
Addicts only report a high when cocaine is
effectively blocking dopamine reuptake,
increasing extracellular dopamine
IV amphetamine study – euphoria reported
correlated with dopamine levels in nucleus
accumbens
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Brain Mechanisms of Addiction: Recent Developments
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Addicts show poor decision making and lack of self
control, suggestive of prefrontal cortex role
Other neurotransmitters: glutamate, endo-genous
opioids, norepinephrine, GABA, and
endocannabinoids
Drug addiction may be related to other non-adaptive
behaviors, such as compulsive eating, gambling,
sexual behavior, klepto-mania, shopping, etc.
Copyright © 2009 Allyn & Bacon