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| Volume 67 Number
5&6 October & November 2000 |
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| Neurobiology of Addictive Behaviors and Relationship to Methadone Maintenance | 375-380 |
Barry Stimmel, M.D., and Mary Jeanne Kreek, M.D. |
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| Address correspondence to Barry Stimmel, M.D., Dean for Graduate Medical Education, Box 1193, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, One East 100th Street, New York, NY 10029-6574. |
ABSTRACT
Scientific information about the neurobiology of addictive behaviors provides
an increasingly important rationale to support opioid agonist pharmacotherapy,
primarily methadone maintenance treatment, for long-term heroin addiction. In
late 1963 and 1964, the first research was performed at The Rockefeller Institute
for Medical Research by Dole, Nyswander, and Kreek in an attempt to develop
a new pharmacotherapy for opiate addiction. The hypothesis underlying that research
was that heroin addiction was a disease. However, the evidence for heroin addiction
being a disease was based primarily on clinical anecdotes and the natural history
of opiate addiction. Until then chronic addiction was managed primarily using
abstinence-based, medication-free behavioral approaches. Such approaches were
uniformly successful in only a small percent of long-term heroin addicts. Subsequent
research, both clinical research as well as laboratory-based research, using
a variety of appropriate animal models as well as in vitro techniques, has shown
that drugs of abuse in general, and specifically the short-acting opiates, such
as heroin, may profoundly alter molecular and neurochemical indices, and thus
physiologic functions. Also, research has shown that after chronic exposure
to a short-acting opiate, these alterations may be persistent, or even permanent,
and may contribute directly to the perpetuation of self-administration of opiates,
and even the return to opiate use after achieving a drug-free and medication-free
state. There is ample evidence now that disruption of several components of
the endogenous opioid system, ranging from changes in gene expression to changes
in behavior, may occur during cycles of short-acting opiate abuse. Also, there
are very convincing studies that suggest that stress responsivity is profoundly
altered by chronic abuse of short-acting opiates including: documentation of
atypical hypo-responsivity to stressors during cycles of heroin addiction; evidence
of sustained hyper-responsivity to stressors in the medication-free, illicit-opiate-free
state; and in contrast, normalization of stress responsivity, as reflected by
the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis function in long-term, methadone-maintained
patients. Thus, both laboratory and clinical research studies provide firm documentation
that the disruption of physiologic, as well as behavioral, functions occurs
during chronic administration of short-acting opiates. Also, there is research
evidence of an epidemiologic, and more recently of a molecular genetics type,
that a genetic vulnerability to develop addictions in general, and opiate addiction
specifically, may exist, and that early environmental factors may alter physiology
to enhance vulnerability to develop opiate addiction when self-exposed.
KEY WORDS
Heroin, methadone,
heroin
addiction, methadone
maintenance, neurobiology
of addiction
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