Neurochemical Explanations Of Nicotine Addiction Flashcards
addiction initiation
smoke is inhaled
nicotine enters brain and binds to neurons in ventral tegmental area (VTA)
these neurons trigger release of dopamine in nucleus accumbens
effects the pre-frontal cortex which is responsible for decision making, explaining why addicts might choose short-term benefits (smoking) over long-term consequences (cancer)
release of dopamine produces feelings of reward & pleasure. it is this pleasure & drive to repeat the process that leads to addiction
addiction maintenance
when someone goes without nicotine (e.g. when they sleep), it is metabolised
this means the smoker experiences acute withdrawal syndrome as the nicotine receptors (nAChRs) are available but not being stimulated. to avoid withdrawal, a smoker will have another cig
chronic desensitisation (from repetitive activation & deactivation of nAChRs) means a smoker must increase nicotine intake for same effect (tolerance)
this explains how nicotine addiction is maintained as the smoker now has a cig to avoid withdrawal syndrome and ‘feel normal’
strength of brain chemistry
strong research evidence
McEvoy et al (1995)
studied smoking behaviour in schizophrenic patients some of which were taking haloperidol (dopamine antagonist), smoking increasing in sample. acted as a form of self-medication, attempt to achieve nicotine hit by increasing dopamine release
reinforces importance of dopamine reward system in nicotine addiction
strength 2
real life applications
when the theory can be used in real life to benefit society
NRT in form of patches or inhalers has been developed to help people overcome addiction. gives a controlled amount of nicotine, allowing them to manage withdrawal whist activating dopamine reward pathway
suggests neurochemical explanation of nicotine addiction has helped society through development of successful treatments, increasing validity
limit 1
too simplistic
only focuses on one neurotransmitter system (dopamine)
however, more recent research suggests a complex interaction of several systems,, such as GABA and serotonin pathways, are involved in nicotine addiction
suggests although dopamine is central to nicotine addiction, in order to get holistic understanding, we need to assess how other neurotransmitters are included
limit 2
biologically reductionist
which is when a theory suggests our free choice is limited by internal, biological factors
choi et al (2003) found only 50% of people who experimented became dependent. also most adolescents who become dependent had peers who smoked or felt they were underachieving in school
suggests could be argued that crucial environmental and psychological factors (inc peer pressure, self-esteem, confidence) are in danger of being ignored by focusing on brain neurochemistry to explain addiction