PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Studies explore potential origins of addiction and treaments

Novel therapies for nicotine, heroin, and gambling addiction show promise

2013-11-13
(Press-News.org) Contact information: Kat Snodgrass
media@sfn.org
202-962-4090
Society for Neuroscience
Studies explore potential origins of addiction and treaments Novel therapies for nicotine, heroin, and gambling addiction show promise SAN DIEGO — Studies released today suggest promising new treatments for nicotine and heroin addiction, and further our understanding of pathological gambling and heroin abuse in those suffering chronic pain. This new knowledge, released at Neuroscience 2013, the annual meeting of the Society for Neuroscience and the world's largest source of emerging news about brain science and health, may one day lead to non-pharmaceutical interventions and therapies to treat addiction.

According to the World Health Organization, 15.3 million people worldwide suffer from drug use disorders. A variety of brain areas and processes play a role in addictive behaviors, complicating treatment and costing millions of dollars and lives each year. Today's studies contribute to an understanding of how compulsive disorders like addiction develop and provide new insight into methods to treat addictive behaviors .

The new findings show that: Magnetic stimulation of the brain helps some people decrease their smoking, and even quit altogether for up to six months after treatment (Abraham Zangen, abstract 635.03, see attached summary). Stimulating an area of the brain associated with drug reward, the subthalamic nucleus, reduces rats' motivation to take heroin (Carrie Wade, PhD, abstract 818.03, see attached summary). Chronic pain leads rats already exposed to drugs to take more and higher doses of heroin, suggesting that people with addiction are more susceptible to overdose when in chronic pain (Lucia Hipolito, PhD, abstract 158.05, see attached summary).

Other recent findings discussed show that: Drug abuse stresses the brain, and the resulting dysregulation of systems involved in the stress response could contribute to negative feelings that trigger increased drug taking and addiction (George Koob, PhD, presentation 689, see attached speaker summary). Research suggests an area of the brain known as the insula may be overactive in people with gambling problems. People with damage to this area were less prone to the motivations of gamblers, providing a clue to identify areas of the brain that are linked to gambling addiction (Luke Clark, PhD, presentation 686.05, see attached speaker summary). Pathological gamblers may love a cash payout, but care less about other types of rewards, such as sex or food. Researchers found pathological gamblers showed decreased activity in reward-sensitive brain areas when money wasn't involved (Guillaume Sescousse, PhD, presentation 686.06, see attached speaker summary).

"Non-drug interventions would be an enormous step forward in drug abuse treatment, which currently relies on replacing one drug with another and has an extremely high rate of relapse," said press conference moderator Barry Everitt of the University of Cambridge, an expert in drug abuse research. "Today's exciting results give us new ways of understanding why compulsive conditions such as drug abuse and pathological gambling might arise, and give us targets to explore for non-drug treatment, which would help us treat a population suffering from addiction."

INFORMATION:

This research was supported by national funding agencies such as the National Institutes of Health, as well as private and philanthropic organizations. Find more information on addiction at BrainFacts.org.

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

NASA satellites see Cyclone 03A make landfall in Somalia

2013-11-13
NASA satellites see Cyclone 03A make landfall in Somalia Tropical Cyclone 03A made landfall in Somalia and moved inland where it is dissipating over eastern Ethiopia today, Nov. 12. NASA's Aqua, Terra and TRMM satellites passed over the cyclone an captured images ...

NASA sees ex-Tropical Depression 30W trying to re-form in Indian Ocean

2013-11-13
NASA sees ex-Tropical Depression 30W trying to re-form in Indian Ocean Tropical Depression 30W formed in the northwestern Pacific Ocean basin and crossed into the Northern Indian Ocean from Nov. 8 to Nov. 10. By Nov. 12, NASA satellite imagery saw the ex-tropical ...

NASA satellites track Typhoon Haiyan's second landfall and flood potential

2013-11-13
NASA satellites track Typhoon Haiyan's second landfall and flood potential VIDEO: This TRMM animation of flood potential from Nov. 2 to Nov. 12 shows the movement of ...

Studies explore potential origins of addiction and treatments

2013-11-13
Studies explore potential origins of addiction and treatments Novel therapies for nicotine, heroin, and gambling addiction show promise SAN DIEGO — Studies released today suggest promising new treatments for nicotine and heroin addiction, and further our understanding ...

Musical training shapes brain anatomy and affects function

2013-11-13
Musical training shapes brain anatomy and affects function Training before age 7 has bigger impact on brain anatomy; improvisation can rewire brain SAN DIEGO — New findings show that extensive musical training affects the structure and function of different brain regions, ...

NYU researchers find a new solution in detecting breast-cancer related lymphedem

2013-11-13
NYU researchers find a new solution in detecting breast-cancer related lymphedem Findings suggest affective reliable and accurate measurement of Lymphedema may help ease breast-cancer survivors fears Viewed as one of the most feared outcomes of breast ...

Evidence of 3.5 billion-year-old bacterial ecosystems found in Australia

2013-11-13
Evidence of 3.5 billion-year-old bacterial ecosystems found in Australia Washington, D.C.— Reconstructing the rise of life during the period of Earth's history when it first evolved is challenging. Earth's oldest sedimentary rocks are not only rare, but also almost always altered ...

Clinical trial finds concurrent therapy not necessary to achieve high pathological in breast cancer

2013-11-13
Clinical trial finds concurrent therapy not necessary to achieve high pathological in breast cancer Phase III trial examines pathological complete response rate HOUSTON — Giving trastuzumab and anthracyclines at the same time ...

Parental monitoring lowers odds of a gambling problem

2013-11-13
Parental monitoring lowers odds of a gambling problem Parental supervision at ages 11-14 lowers risk for problem gambling by age 22 November 12, 2013—Keeping an eye on your child can lower their odds for gambling by young adulthood, ...

Bring a 50,000-degree plasma into your living room

2013-11-13
Bring a 50,000-degree plasma into your living room An online open-user experiment puts users in control of a real physics laboratory With the rise of online open course platforms such as Khan Academy, MIT OpenCourseWare and iTunes U, it has never been easier to ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

New insights into tRNA-derived small RNAs offer hope for digestive tract disease diagnosis and treatment

Emotive marketing for sustainable consumption?

Prostate cancer is not a death knell, study shows

Unveiling the role of tumor-infiltrating immune cells in endometrial carcinoma

Traditional Chinese medicine unlocks new potential in treating diseases through ferroptosis regulation

MSU study pinpoints the impact of prenatal stress across 27 weeks of pregnancy

Biochemist’s impact on science and students honored

ELF4: A key transcription factor shaping immunity and cancer progression

Updated chronic kidney disease management guidelines recommend SGLT2 inhibitors regardless of diabetes or kidney disease type

New research explores how AI can build trust in knowledge work

Compound found in common herbs inspires potential anti-inflammatory drug for Alzheimer’s disease

Inhaled COVID vaccine begins recruitment for phase-2 human trials

What’s in a label? It’s different for boys vs. girls, new study of parents finds

Genes combined with immune response to Epstein-Barr virus increase MS risk

Proximity and prejudice: Gay discrimination in the gig economy

New paper suggests cold temperatures trigger shapeshifting proteins

Reproductive justice–driven pregnancy interventions can improve mental health

Intranasal herpes infection may produce neurobehavioral symptoms, UIC study finds

Developing treatment strategies for an understudied bladder disease

Investigating how decision-making and behavioral control develop

Rutgers researchers revive decades-old pregnancy cohort with modern scientific potential

Rising CO2 likely to speed decrease in ‘space sustainability’ 

Study: Climate change will reduce the number of satellites that can safely orbit in space

Mysterious phenomenon at center of galaxy could reveal new kind of dark matter

Unlocking the secrets of phase transitions in quantum hardware

Deep reinforcement learning optimizes distributed manufacturing scheduling

AACR announces Fellows of the AACR Academy Class of 2025 and new AACR Academy President

TTUHSC’s Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences hosts 37th Student Research Week

New insights into plant growth

Female sex hormone protects against opioid misuse, rat study finds

[Press-News.org] Studies explore potential origins of addiction and treaments
Novel therapies for nicotine, heroin, and gambling addiction show promise