| Literature DB >> 17514074 |
Michael W Otto1, Conall M O' Cleirigh, Mark H Pollack.
Abstract
Classical conditioning models of addiction provide keys to understanding the vexing discrepancy between substance abuse patients' desire to abstain when they are in therapy sessions and their tendency to relapse. Experiments using these models demonstrate the power of environmental relapse cues and support clinical approaches, including active exposure, aimed at helping patients recognize and withstand them. Internal cues, including emotions and somatic states such as withdrawal, can trigger urges as powerfully as external cues such as people, places, and things associated with prior abuse. The authors describe a cognitive-behavioral therapy approach that focuses on identifying and actively inducing each patient's high-risk emotions, then helping him or her develop and practice healthy responses. Clinical trials support the approach for patients with panic disorder who have trouble discontinuing benzodiazepines, and early trials suggest it may be useful for patients addicted to other drugs as well.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2007 PMID: 17514074 PMCID: PMC2851069 DOI: 10.1151/spp073248
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Pract Perspect ISSN: 1930-4307
FIGURE 1Impulses extinguished in one context can recur in another
Baseline: College students handled and smelled beer in a room. The experience triggered an urge to drink the beer. Extinction phase: The students handled and smelled beer repeatedly without being allowed to drink it, some in the same room (Condition A) and some in another room (Condition B). After many such exposures, the experience triggered only a much attenuated urge to drink the beer. Renewal phase: Later, all the students were again exposed to beer in the original room. Those who had experienced the extinction phase in that room again reported a reduced urge, but those who had experienced it in the other room reported an urge as strong as during the baseline exposure. Based on Collins and Brandon, 2002.
Inducing emotions and sensations
Many emotions are induced by the therapist describing and asking the patient to imagine a past or potential future emotionally challenging event. All such imaginal inductions use realistic scenarios, often actual recent experiences of the patient.
Sensations, particularly those associated with anxiety or withdrawal, often are induced with interoceptive exposure exercises (e.g., hyperventilation).
No induction is undertaken without consideration of the patient’s physical and emotional health in relation to the content, intensity, and duration of exposures (e.g., no headrolling for patients with preexisting neck pain).
| Sadness or Grief | Imaginal review of the death of a loved one or pet |
| Guilt | Imaginal review of child-rearing regrets |
| Frustration/Anger | Imaginal review of disputes with roommates, spouses, etc. |
| Envy/Frustration | Imaginal review of other people having more advantages (e.g., better cars, money in the bank, etc.) |
| Boredom | 1 minute of staring at a blank space on the office wall, thinking “I am so bored” |
| Embarrassment/Frustration | Working simple math problems aloud or spelling aloud |
| Other Emotional Distress | Reading a personally distressing account from the newspaper |
| Dizziness/Disorientation | Rolling the head in a circle while seated |
| Anxiety, Dizziness, Lightheadedness, Numbness, Tingling, Hot Flushes, Visual Distortions | Hyperventilation (1 minute of 1-per-second breaths) |
| Anxiety, Agitation, Trembling, Muscle Heaviness, or Numbness | Full body tension (1 minute of clenching the jaw, shoulders, abdominal muscles, arms, legs, feet) |