addiction Flashcards
what do opiates do?
- powerful pain relief
- euphoria
what is the course of alcohol/drug use, misuse and addiction?
- experimental use (large numbers)
- increasingly regular use (lower numbers)
- spiralling dependence (smaller number)
- -> become an increasing problem (physical and psychological)
what is drug abuse?
substance used in a manner that does not conform to social norms (can abuse drugs without being dependent or addicted)
what is physical drug dependence?
individual depends on drug for normal physiological functioning. abstinence produces physical withdrawal reactions
What is psychological drug dependence?
acquiring and using drug are strong motivators of behaviour (compulsive use)
What is drug addiction?
not a clinical diagnosis. typically used to emphasise psychological dependence. idea that people can be physically dependent but not addicted
How do drugs cause addiction?
change neurochemistry: problems with mood and cognition + physical consequences
What neurotransmitter is used for the reward pathway?
dopamine
Where is dopamine increased in the reward pathway?
in the nucleus accubens
What happens once dopamine has bound to the pos-synaptic receptor?
taken back into the pre-synaptic neurone by dopamine active transporter
What is the MOA of cocaine?
block the function of dopamine Active transporter and Noradrenaline transporter
Dopamine system is also modulated by other neurotransmitters, which one?
GABA (inhibits dopamine)
What is affects in tolerance?
changes in binding to receptors and/or changes in receptor processes and/or numbers
opioid receptors desensitisation and down regulating
What happens in withdrawal?
“normal” function need drugs: sudden cessation produces neurochemical cascade resulting in symptoms
What happens in dependence?
genetics and environmental interaction leading to brain change that causes dependence
(ie: dominee receptor number vary from person to person)
which are the two pathways to addiction?
- sensation seeking
- self medication
What happens in sensation seeing addiction?
goes from positive to negative reinforcement: to stop unpleasant withdrawal state
What happens in self-medication addiction?
Goes from negative to negative reinforcement
how do you treat addiction?
- management of withdrawal
- harm reduction (short term and long term)
- maintaining abstinence (i.e. with lifestyle and behavioural changes e.g. new habit)
how do you prevent relapse?
- agonist maintenance (methadone)
- partial agonist maintenance (bupremorphine)
- antagonist maintenance (naltrexone)
- -> reduce craving
What psychological treatments are used addiction?
- motivational interviewing (non-confrontational and target ambivalence)
- community reinforcement (‘earn’ tokens/money with clean urines)
- relapse prevention (cognition behavioural strategies, skills training i.e. practice saying no, alternative cognitions i.e. what else could i do, lifestyle changes)
What are the three things to look at in addiction for treatment and how do you threat it?
- neurochemistry (pharmacotherapy)
- cognition (psychological therapies)
- social (family therapies)