Neurobiology of Addiction Flashcards

1
Q

What are the 2 main models of addiction?

A

Moral (people who use drugs are doing so for purely selfish reasons)
Medical; people who are addicted leads to neurobiological changes that gradually undermine the persons ability to practice free will surrounding drug use

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2
Q

ICD 10 criteria for dependence

A
A strong desire to take the substance 
Difficulties in controlling substance use
A physiological withdrawal state
Tolerance
Neglect of alternative pleasures
Persistence despite evidence of harm
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3
Q

What is CAGE?

A

Cut-down
Annoyed
Guilty
Eye-opener

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4
Q

What areas of the brain are involved in the motivational (mesolimbic) pathway?

A

VTA (ventral tegmental area)
Nucleus accumbens
Prefrontal cortex
Dopamine is the motivating signal, incentivises behaviour, involved in normal pleasurable experiences

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5
Q

Where will alcohol, nicotine and opiates act?

A

Nucleus accumbens to release dopamine

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6
Q

How do cocaine and amphetamines result in dopamine release?

A

Act directly on dopamine receptors

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7
Q

What can be seen in terms of MRI scans of those with addictive behaviour?

A

TOLERANCE
Non-addicted have increased blood flow to striatum to winning at gambling when compared to those who are addicted to gambling

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8
Q

Are dopamine receptors increased or decreased in addiction?

A

Decreased
Due to repeated dopamine release, dopamine receptors down regulate and therefore the threshold for rewards during abstinence is decreased and normal experiences don’t evoke an adequate reward response

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9
Q

What is the role of the PFC in addiction?

A

Helps intention guide behaviour
Modulates the powerful effects of the reward pathway
Sets goals, focuses attention
Makes sound decisions
Keeps emotions and impulses under control to achieve long term gaols

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10
Q

What is the effect of dopamine release?

A

Ability to uptake new information in the PFC
Ability to select new goals
Ability to avoid compulsive repetitive behaviour

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11
Q

What are the hippocampus, striatum and amygdala involved in in terms of addiction?

A

Acquisition
Consolidation
Expression of drug stimulus learning

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12
Q

What is the role of the orbitofrontal cortex in addiction behaviour?

A

Provides internal representation of the salience of events and assigns values to them
Key creator of motivation to act

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13
Q

What impact does genetics have on addictive behaviour?

A

Way we respond to drug metabolism
Behavioural traits that predispose us to take drugs
How rewarding we find drug taking
Receptor levels; low DRD2 = high risk

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14
Q

What is the impact of stress on addictive behaviour?

A

Acute stress = dopamine release in neural reward pathways

Chronic stress = dampening of dopaminergic activity through down regulation of D receptors

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