Could Brain Abnormality Predict Drug Addiction?
Main Category: Neurology / NeuroscienceAlso Included In: Alcohol / Addiction / Illegal Drugs; Smoking / Quit Smoking; Psychology / Psychiatry
Article Date: 23 Oct 2008 - 5:00 PDT
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Scientists at The University of Nottingham are to use MRI technology to discover whether abnormalities in the decision-making part of the brain could make some people more likely to become addicted to drugs.
In a three-year study, funded with £360,000 from the Medical Research Council, Dr Lee Hogarth in the University's School of Psychology will study the impact that an abnormal frontal cortex can have in people's risk of becoming dependant upon drugs such as tobacco, alcohol, cannabis or heroin.
Dr Hogarth said: "Evidence suggests that a large percentage of the population try drugs but only a small proportion of experimental users - roughly about 15 per cent - will make the transition to full-blown addiction.
"Our study will move us a step closer to understanding why some people can use drugs recreationally without becoming hooked, while others will go on to develop clinical dependence."
The research will focus on the frontal cortex, the area of the brain which is involved in decision-making and which allows us to weigh up short term gain with potential long term negative consequences. The researchers believe that some people may have a biological predisposition to becoming addicted because this portion of their brain is malfunctioning, preventing them from appreciating risks adequately, leading them to make poor choices in relation to drug abuse.
Young people may be particularly affected by this as the frontal cortex is not yet fully developed, which may explain many risk-taking behaviours in adolescents.
The research will compare students who report social versus daily smoking, and adult smokers who are dependant on nicotine versus those who are not. These four groups will allow researchers to trace the transition to dependence across the lifetime of drug use.
In the experiments, volunteers will first learn to earn cigarettes before this behaviour is punished with an unpleasant noise. The question is whether nicotine dependence is associated with a persistence in cigarette seeking despite the negative consequence of this behaviour, which is the clinical hallmark of addiction.
In addition, researchers will use MRI technology to measure abnormal brain activity in participants who persist in drug seeking, despite this behaviour being punished.
Dr Hogarth commented: "The risk of becoming addicted is due to a failure to offset the anticipated pleasure from drug use with knowledge of the long term negative consequences. The frontal cortex carries signals for anticipated pleasure and pain, so we expect to see an abnormality in the integration of these signals in dependent addicts who persist in punished drug seeking behaviour.
"There is currently a debate as to whether addicts are responsible for their addictive behaviour, which has implications for the funding of their healthcare and treatment. If our hypothesis proves correct, we would argue that addicts are intentionally choosing to take drugs, rather than being controlled, like robots, by urges beyond their control. However, this does not mean that addicts are morally culpable for their choices, because they cannot help being vulnerable to a distortion of the neural system that computes their choices.
"If we identify those who possess this vulnerability, perhaps more can be done to prevent them from making the transition to pathological addiction."
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Source: Emma Thorne
University of Nottingham
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Visitor Opinions In Chronological Order (1)
Peer Pressure Not Brain Damage Causes Addiction! Addiction Then May Cause Brain Damage!
posted by Janie Lee M.Ed. on 23 Oct 2008 at 10:20 pmThe fact is that peer pressure, likeability of the affects or pleasure gained from a drug, doctors upping the dose, ease of obtaining the kind people like or availability of the favorite drug, upbringing leading towards sales, or hardships that are easily ignored once under the spell of drugs leads to more people becoming addicted than anything. That doesn't have to do with the brains abnormality.
Sometimes I think it is fear too. Fear of not fitting in the crowd or fear of who is in the crowd that you are trying to fit into. Fear of what they might do to you if you don't do it with them or being an outcast.
Peer pressure can be used for both good and bad, depending on how it is being used and for what reason.
In a social atmosphere where the common street person can legally tell you how good mind altering pills are and also cheap magazines that can also tell you what they can do for you and make them sound wonderful, no wonder the prescription drug is the most easiest drug to get addicted to at this point. Especially when medicaid or other programs can pay for all of it for a poor person that other wise couldn't afford to get it has no problem obtaining it then.
We have drug companies paying for so much of the research and also sponsoring everything that is around that involves taking drugs now, like mental health programs for instance. I bring this up because it is beneficial to get people hooked on prescription drugs. If you get enough of them hooked you have a regular customer base.
What I don't understand is why part of it is now termed illegal / addiction and part of it is not as long as it is done with a prescription. What I also understand is that we can't just take people off these drugs cold turkey because that can be dangerous to them. It may not always, but it can cause toxic seizures.
We may say that drugs are dangerous, but with the attitudes that we have in our society no one will believe that. If you say that a drug is dangerous you have to give reasons that are logical, truthful, and can fully inform a person.
You may also have to admit that you know one person can take it and it not destroy them and the next may not be able to. Just like with addiction, and this study if it doesn't study those that haven't ever used drugs will be biased in the first place.
As in the case of inhalants one person can huff it and not die and the next person may take it and may die the first time or have very serious brain damage from it, that is just the fact of it.
Then you have to explain that most of the drugs (psychotropic) that affect one's mind over the long haul can cause serious brain damage, no matter if one calls them legal or not!
I think this study is going to be one more big waste of money, really. When better things could be done with the money to make things better for everyone overall, this is just my thoughts on it.
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