Literature DB >> 19834992

The neurobiology of addictive disorders.

Stephen Ross1, Eric Peselow.   

Abstract

Addiction is increasingly understood as a neurobiological illness where repetitive substance abuse corrupts the normal circuitry of rewarding and adaptive behaviors causing drug-induced neuroplastic changes. The addictive process can be examined by looking at the biological basis of substance initiation to the progression of substance abuse to dependence to the enduring risk of relapse. Critical neurotransmitters and neurocircuits underlie the pathological changes at each of these stages. Enhanced dopamine transmission in the nucleus accumbens is part of the common pathway for the positively rewarding aspects of drugs of abuse and for initiation of the addictive process. F-Aminobutyric acid,opioid peptides, serotonin, acetylcholine, the endocannabinoids, and glutamate systems also play a role in the initial addictive process. Dopamine also plays a key role in conditioned responses to drugs of abuse, and addiction is now recognized as a disease of pathological learning and memory. In the path from substance abuse to addiction, the neurochemistry shifts from a dopamine-based behavioral system to a predominantly glutamate-based one marked by dysregulated glutamate transmission from the prefrontal cortex to the nucleus accumbens in relation to drug versus biologically oriented stimuli. This is a core part of the executive dysfunction now understood as one of the hallmark features of addiction that also includes impaired decision making and impulse dysregulation.Understanding the neurobiology of the addictive process allows for a theoretical psychopharmacological approach to treating addictive disorders,one that takes into account biological interventions aimed at particular stages of the illness.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19834992     DOI: 10.1097/wnf.0b013e3181a9163c

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Neuropharmacol        ISSN: 0362-5664            Impact factor:   1.592


  45 in total

1.  Dopaminergic reward system: a short integrative review.

Authors:  Oscar Arias-Carrión; Maria Stamelou; Eric Murillo-Rodríguez; Manuel Menéndez-González; Ernst Pöppel
Journal:  Int Arch Med       Date:  2010-10-06

2.  Is non-suicidal self-injury an "addiction"? A comparison of craving in substance use and non-suicidal self-injury.

Authors:  Sarah Elizabeth Victor; Catherine Rose Glenn; Elisha David Klonsky
Journal:  Psychiatry Res       Date:  2012-03-06       Impact factor: 3.222

3.  Addiction is a disease: we must change our attitudes toward addicts.

Authors:  Matthew B Stanbrook
Journal:  CMAJ       Date:  2011-12-12       Impact factor: 8.262

4.  Addiction is not a disease.

Authors:  Tim Holden
Journal:  CMAJ       Date:  2012-04-03       Impact factor: 8.262

Review 5.  Mechanisms underlying sleep-wake disturbances in alcoholism: focus on the cholinergic pedunculopontine tegmentum.

Authors:  Clifford M Knapp; Domenic A Ciraulo; Subimal Datta
Journal:  Behav Brain Res       Date:  2014-08-20       Impact factor: 3.332

Review 6.  Endocannabinoid influence in drug reinforcement, dependence and addiction-related behaviors.

Authors:  Antonia Serrano; Loren H Parsons
Journal:  Pharmacol Ther       Date:  2011-07-18       Impact factor: 12.310

7.  Association of maternal and infant variants in PNOC and COMT genes with neonatal abstinence syndrome severity.

Authors:  Elisha M Wachman; Marie J Hayes; Richard Sherva; Mark S Brown; Hira Shrestha; Beth A Logan; Nicole A Heller; David A Nielsen; Lindsay A Farrer
Journal:  Am J Addict       Date:  2016-12-16

8.  Adjunctive aripiprazole therapy with escitalopram in patients with co-morbid major depressive disorder and alcohol dependence: clinical and neuroimaging evidence.

Authors:  Doug Hyun Han; Sun Mi Kim; Jung Eun Choi; Kyung Joon Min; Perry F Renshaw
Journal:  J Psychopharmacol       Date:  2013-01-16       Impact factor: 4.153

Review 9.  The Opioid-Addicted Tetrapartite Synapse.

Authors:  Anna Kruyer; Vivian C Chioma; Peter W Kalivas
Journal:  Biol Psychiatry       Date:  2019-06-13       Impact factor: 13.382

10.  CID: a valid incentive delay paradigm for children.

Authors:  Viola Kappel; Anne Koch; Robert C Lorenz; Rüdiger Brühl; Babette Renneberg; Ulrike Lehmkuhl; Harriet Salbach-Andrae; Anne Beck
Journal:  J Neural Transm (Vienna)       Date:  2013-01-22       Impact factor: 3.575

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