药物使用失调症奖赏的人体实验室模型。

IF 3.3 3区 心理学 Q1 BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES
Alexandra N. Johansen , Samuel F. Acuff , Justin C. Strickland
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引用次数: 0

摘要

药物使用失调的人体实验模型是高度可控、机理信息丰富的非人类临床前方法与在人群中进行的临床试验之间的一个关键中间步骤。与临床前模型一样,各种人体实验方法都能让人们深入了解药物使用障碍的具体特征,而不是在单一模型中同时模拟各种原因和后果。本叙事性综述讨论了药物使用障碍人体实验室研究中常用的奖励模型,重点是每种模型对临床结果(前向转化)和临床前模型中的类似物(后向转化)的具体贡献。本文讨论了人体实验室研究的四个核心领域:药物自我给药、主观效应、行为经济学以及认知和执行功能。讨论了常用的测量方法和模型、这些方法声称要评估的药物使用障碍的特征、测量有效性和应用的独特问题、与临床前模型的转化联系,以及希望评估跨物种同源性的研究的特别注意事项。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Human laboratory models of reward in substance use disorder

Human laboratory models in substance use disorder provide a key intermediary step between highly controlled and mechanistically informative non-human preclinical methods and clinical trials conducted in human populations. Much like preclinical models, the variety of human laboratory methods provide insights into specific features of substance use disorder rather than modelling the diverse causes and consequences simultaneously in a single model. This narrative review provides a discussion of popular models of reward used in human laboratory research on substance use disorder with a focus on the specific contributions that each model has towards informing clinical outcomes (forward translation) and analogs within preclinical models (backward translation). Four core areas of human laboratory research are discussed: drug self-administration, subjective effects, behavioral economics, and cognitive and executive function. Discussion of common measures and models used, the features of substance use disorder that these methods are purported to evaluate, unique issues for measure validity and application, and translational links to preclinical models and special considerations for studies wishing to evaluate homology across species is provided.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.40
自引率
2.80%
发文量
122
审稿时长
38 days
期刊介绍: Pharmacology Biochemistry & Behavior publishes original reports in the areas of pharmacology and biochemistry in which the primary emphasis and theoretical context are behavioral. Contributions may involve clinical, preclinical, or basic research. Purely biochemical or toxicology studies will not be published. Papers describing the behavioral effects of novel drugs in models of psychiatric, neurological and cognitive disorders, and central pain must include a positive control unless the paper is on a disease where such a drug is not available yet. Papers focusing on physiological processes (e.g., peripheral pain mechanisms, body temperature regulation, seizure activity) are not accepted as we would like to retain the focus of Pharmacology Biochemistry & Behavior on behavior and its interaction with the biochemistry and neurochemistry of the central nervous system. Papers describing the effects of plant materials are generally not considered, unless the active ingredients are studied, the extraction method is well described, the doses tested are known, and clear and definite experimental evidence on the mechanism of action of the active ingredients is provided.
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