Addiction and brain reward and antireward pathways.

Advances in Psychosomatic Medicine Pub Date : 2011-01-01 Epub Date: 2011-04-19 DOI:10.1159/000324065
Eliot L Gardner
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Addictive drugs have in common that they are voluntarily self-administered by laboratory animals (usually avidly), and that they enhance the functioning of the reward circuitry of the brain (producing the 'high' that the drug user seeks). The core reward circuitry consists of an 'in-series' circuit linking the ventral tegmental area, nucleus accumbens and ventral pallidum via the medial forebrain bundle. Although originally believed to simply encode the set point of hedonic tone, these circuits are now believed to be functionally far more complex, also encoding attention, expectancy of reward, disconfirmation of reward expectancy, and incentive motivation. 'Hedonic dysregulation' within these circuits may lead to addiction. The 'second-stage' dopaminergic component in this reward circuitry is the crucial addictive-drug-sensitive component. All addictive drugs have in common that they enhance (directly or indirectly or even transsynaptically) dop-aminergic reward synaptic function in the nucleus accumbens. Drug self-administration is regulated by nucleus accumbens dopamine levels, and is done to keep nucleus accumbens dopamine within a specific elevated range (to maintain a desired hedonic level). For some classes of addictive drugs (e.g. opiates), tolerance to the euphoric effects develops with chronic use. Postuse dysphoria then comes to dominate reward circuit hedonic tone, and addicts no longer use drugs to get high, but simply to get back to normal ('get straight'). The brain circuits mediating the pleasurable effects of addictive drugs are anatomically, neurophysiologically and neurochemically different from those mediating physical dependence, and from those mediating craving and relapse. There are important genetic variations in vulnerability to drug addiction, yet environmental factors such as stress and social defeat also alter brain-reward mechanisms in such a manner as to impart vulnerability to addiction. In short, the 'bio-psycho-social' model of etiology holds very well for addiction. Addiction appears to correlate with a hypodopaminergic dysfunctional state within the reward circuitry of the brain. Neuroimaging studies in humans add credence to this hypothesis. Credible evidence also implicates serotonergic, opioid, endocannabinoid, GABAergic and glutamatergic mechanisms in addiction. Critically, drug addiction progresses from occasional recreational use to impulsive use to habitual compulsive use. This correlates with a progression from reward-driven to habit-driven drug-seeking behavior. This behavioral progression correlates with a neuroanatomical progression from ventral striatal (nucleus accumbens) to dorsal striatal control over drug-seeking behavior. The three classical sets of craving and relapse triggers are (a) reexposure to addictive drugs, (b) stress, and (c) reexposure to environmental cues (people, places, things) previously associated with drug-taking behavior. Drug-triggered relapse involves the nucleus accumbens and the neurotransmitter dopamine. Stress-triggered relapse involves (a) the central nucleus of the amygdala, the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis, and the neurotransmitter corticotrophin-releasing factor, and (b) the lateral tegmental noradrenergic nuclei of the brain stem and the neurotransmitter norepinephrine. Cue-triggered relapse involves the basolateral nucleus of the amygdala, the hippocampus and the neurotransmitter glutamate. Knowledge of the neuroanatomy, neurophysiology, neurochemistry and neuropharmacology of addictive drug action in the brain is currently producing a variety of strategies for pharmacotherapeutic treatment of drug addiction, some of which appear promising.

成瘾与大脑奖赏和反奖赏通路。
成瘾药物的共同点是,实验动物会自愿(通常是狂热地)自行服用,而且它们会增强大脑奖赏回路的功能(产生吸毒者所追求的 "兴奋")。核心奖赏回路由一个 "串联 "回路组成,通过内侧前脑束连接腹侧被盖区、伏隔核和腹侧苍白球。虽然这些回路最初被认为只是编码享乐基调的设定点,但现在人们认为它们在功能上要复杂得多,还编码注意力、对奖励的预期、对奖励预期的不确认以及激励动机。这些回路中的 "快乐失调 "可能会导致成瘾。这种奖赏回路中的 "第二阶段 "多巴胺能成分是关键的成瘾药物敏感成分。所有成瘾药物都有一个共同点,即它们都会增强(直接或间接,甚至是经突触)伏隔核的多巴胺能奖赏突触功能。药物的自我给药受伏隔核多巴胺水平的调节,其目的是使伏隔核多巴胺保持在特定的升高范围内(以维持理想的享乐水平)。对于某些类别的成瘾药物(如阿片剂),长期使用会产生对欣快效应的耐受性。用药后的幻觉会主导奖赏回路的享乐基调,成瘾者不再为了兴奋而用药,而只是为了恢复正常("改邪归正")。在解剖学、神经生理学和神经化学上,介导成瘾药物愉悦效应的大脑回路与介导身体依赖性的大脑回路不同,也与介导渴求和复吸的大脑回路不同。吸毒成瘾的易感性存在重要的遗传变异,但压力和社会挫折等环境因素也会改变大脑的回报机制,从而使人容易成瘾。简而言之,"生物-心理-社会 "的病因学模型非常适用于成瘾问题。成瘾似乎与大脑奖赏回路中的低多巴胺能失调状态有关。对人类进行的神经影像学研究进一步证实了这一假设。可信的证据还表明,血清素能、阿片、内大麻素、GABA 能和谷氨酸能机制也与成瘾有关。重要的是,吸毒成瘾会从偶尔娱乐性使用发展到冲动性使用,再发展到习惯性强迫使用。这与从奖赏驱动到习惯驱动的寻求毒品行为有关。这种行为发展与神经解剖学上对觅药行为的控制从腹侧纹状体(凹凸核)发展到背侧纹状体有关。三组经典的渴求和复吸诱因是:(a)再次接触成瘾药物;(b)压力;(c)再次接触以前与吸毒行为相关的环境线索(人、地点、事物)。由毒品引发的复吸涉及到伏隔核和神经递质多巴胺。压力触发的复吸涉及(a)杏仁核中央核、纹状体末端床核和神经递质促肾上腺皮质激素释放因子,以及(b)脑干外侧被盖去甲肾上腺素能核和神经递质去甲肾上腺素。线索触发的复发涉及杏仁核基底外侧核、海马和神经递质谷氨酸。目前,有关成瘾药物在大脑中作用的神经解剖学、神经生理学、神经化学和神经药理学的知识正在产生各种药物治疗药物成瘾的策略,其中一些似乎很有前景。
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期刊介绍: The importance of psychosomatic research has been greatly reinforced by evidence demonstrating that psychological phenomena may have distinct effects on human health. Recognizing the complexity of interactions between personality and physical illness, this series employs an interdisciplinary strategy to explore areas where knowledge from psychosomatic medicine may aid in the prevention of specific diseases or help meet the emotional demands of hospitalized patients. In each work, the editor has managed to bring together distinguished contributors, creating a series of coherent and comprehensive reviews on a variety of novel topics.
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