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

In addiction, meditation is helpful when coupled with drug and cognitive therapies

A new paper suggests that rehabilitation strategies coupling meditation-like practices with drug and behavior therapies are more helpful than drug-plus-talk therapy alone when helping people overcome addiction

2013-12-20
(Press-News.org) Contact information: Janet Lathrop
jlathrop@admin.umass.edu
413-545-0444
University of Massachusetts at Amherst
In addiction, meditation is helpful when coupled with drug and cognitive therapies A new paper suggests that rehabilitation strategies coupling meditation-like practices with drug and behavior therapies are more helpful than drug-plus-talk therapy alone when helping people overcome addiction

AMHERST, Mass. – Using a computational model of addiction, a literature review and an in silico experiment, theoretical computer scientist Yariv Levy and colleagues suggest in a new paper this week that rehabilitation strategies coupling meditation-like practices with drug and behavior therapies are more helpful than drug-plus-talk therapy alone when helping people overcome addiction.

Levy reports results of his survey of animal and human studies and a computational experiment in a special section on addictive disorders in the current issue of the open access journal Frontiers in Psychiatry. He conducted this investigation while a doctoral student at the University of Massachusetts Amherst with neuroscience researcher Jerrold Meyer, an expert in the neurochemistry of human psychiatric disorders, and computer scientist Andrew Barto, an expert in mathematical theory of learning and planning.

Levy says the goal is to translate what has been learned from animal and human studies to better understand addiction and explore new approaches to treatment. Another member of the research team was neuroeconomist Dino Levy of Tel Aviv University, an expert in decision-making processes who developed the core of the theoretical model. He is no relation to lead author Yariv Levy.

Levy says, "Our higher-level conclusion is that a treatment based on meditation-like techniques can be helpful as a supplement to help someone get out of addiction. We give scientific and mathematical arguments for this."

His theoretical research approach using virtual subjects is rather unusual, Levy acknowledges, but it's now gaining significant trust because it offers some strengths. In particular, because it relies on the increasing amount of available data and knowledge, in silico research offers quick preliminary tests of "rationally supported speculations," he says, before full-scale experiments are launched with human patients or animals.

"I am a theoretician, so I use other peoples' studies and try to see how they work together and how experiments fit in," Levy points out. "This work follows a knowledge repository (KR) model, where the knowledge comes from other peoples' theories and experiments. By consolidating them, we propose some hypotheses that we hope will subsequently be tested by experts in the field." The KR model used in his current work incorporates pharmacokinetic, pharmacodynamic, neuropsychological, cognitive and behavioral components, the researcher notes.

The researchers explored the allostatic theory of addiction by combining two existing computational models, one pharmacological and the other a more behavioral-cognitive model. The allostatic theory describes changes in the brain's reward and anti-reward systems and reward set points as substance misuse progresses. "Neural adaptations arising from the reward system itself and from the anti-reward system provide the subject with functional stability, while affecting the person's mood. We propose a computational hypothesis describing how a virtual subject's drug consumption, cognitive substrate and mood interface with reward and anti-reward systems," they write.

Put more simply, the allostatic theory says that when someone takes a drug he or she stresses the reward system and it loses its homeostatic or equilibrium state. "We smoke one cigarette and go out, come back in again, and out with another cigarette, always trying to return to equilibrium," Levy says. "The reward system tries to change its structure with neural adaptations to get back to equilibrium. But if I continue to smoke, even with such adaptations, I can't make it back. Equilibrium is broken as long as I continue to smoke."

Here a second mechanism kicks in. "The reward system is so stressed, one can't come back to equilibrium," Levy explains. "So the anti-reward system says, 'I'll try to help.' The person or animal enters an allostatic state." Other brain structures are affected by the addictive substance, impairing the addict's evaluation of drug use compared to other reinforcers, he adds.

To bind the two theories and test how they could work together in silico, the authors follow three virtual case studies, each representing a different trajectory of allostatic state during escalation of cigarette smoking. Case Study 1 shows a virtual subject consuming drugs for the first time, relapsing after a period of abstinence with a concomitant negative shift in mood, a baseline situation with no therapeutic intervention. In Case Study 2, among other variations, the virtual subject uses a nicotine patch for 25 days while the same variables including mood are evaluated as for Case Study 1. In Case Study 3, the virtual subject undergoes treatment intended to emulate healing therapy periods that include meditation.

Among other outcomes, Levy says, "We try to describe what could be the cognitive effect of using a nicotine patch. What does it imply at the cognitive level, when people are willing to use one? Others have showed changes in prefrontal cortex where decisions are made, in executive function, as drug use progresses. Also, we did a small simulation of a couple of weeks with a patch, then tried to simulate the cognitive effect of using meditation for a few weeks."

Overall, "This investigation provides formal arguments encouraging current rehabilitation therapies to include meditation-like practices along with pharmaceutical drugs and behavioral counseling," the authors write.



INFORMATION:



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Mating is the kiss of death for certain female worms

2013-12-20
Mating is the kiss of death for certain female worms The presence of male sperm and seminal fluid causes female worms to shrivel and die after giving birth, Princeton University researchers reported this week in the journal Science. The demise of the female appears ...

Landscape architecture study places value on Klyde Warren Park, other urban spaces

2013-12-20
Landscape architecture study places value on Klyde Warren Park, other urban spaces New research area tells entities what public projects are worth A UT Arlington landscape architect and his graduate students have published three case studies for the 2013 Case ...

Telecoupling science shows China's forest sustainability packs global impact

2013-12-20
Telecoupling science shows China's forest sustainability packs global impact As China increases its forests, a Michigan State University (MSU) sustainability scholar proposes a new way to answer the question: if a tree doesn't fall in China, can you hear it elsewhere ...

New ways to promote fitness for urban girls proposed by Rutgers-Camden nursing professor

2013-12-20
New ways to promote fitness for urban girls proposed by Rutgers-Camden nursing professor Most people know that one of the keys to reducing or preventing health problems is to get more exercise, but determining how to best integrate physical activity into their ...

Disabled shoppers confront holiday shopping barriers

2013-12-20
Disabled shoppers confront holiday shopping barriers Before chestnuts roast on the fire and sugarplums dance in the dreams of youngsters, the holiday season elicits visions of crowded parking lots and malls overrun by shoppers while retailers try to keep up with ...

Bullying in academia more prevalent than thought, says Rutgers-Camden scholar

2013-12-20
Bullying in academia more prevalent than thought, says Rutgers-Camden scholar CAMDEN — Bullying isn't only a problem that occurs in schools or online among young people. It can happen anywhere to anyone, and a Rutgers–Camden nursing scholar is shedding some ...

CCNY chemists use sugar-based gelators to solidify vegetable oils

2013-12-20
CCNY chemists use sugar-based gelators to solidify vegetable oils Mannitol and sorbitol dioctanoates could provide alternatives to trans fats linked to obesity, coronary artery disease and diabetes Researchers at The City College of New York have reported the ...

Oh, the places you'll go -- if you're an Atlantic slipper shell

2013-12-20
Oh, the places you'll go -- if you're an Atlantic slipper shell New research reveals the biomechanics of how marine snails swim Walk the beach or peer into a tidepool anywhere along the northeastern U.S. coast, and you'll find shells stacked on top of one another. ...

Saving fertility not priority at most cancer centers

2013-12-20
Saving fertility not priority at most cancer centers Lack of policies to protect cancer patients' fertility at top cancer centers CHICAGO --- Infertility is consistently listed as one of the most distressing long-term side effects of cancer treatment for adolescents ...

Ancient cranial surgery

2013-12-20
Ancient cranial surgery UCSB bioarchaeologist studies trepanation -- a practice of drilling holes in the cranium that dates back thousands of years Cranial surgery is tricky business, even under 21st-century conditions (think aseptic environment, ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

From single cells to complex creatures: New study points to origins of animal multicellularity

Language disparities in continuous glucose monitoring for type 2 diabetes

New hormonal pathway links oxytocin to insulin secretion in the pancreas

Optimal management of erosive esophagitis: An evidence-based and pragmatic approach

For patients with multiple cancers, a colorectal cancer diagnosis could be lifesaving — or life-threatening

Digital inhalers may detect early warning signs of COPD flare-ups

Living near harmful algal blooms reduces life expectancy with ALS

Chemical analysis of polyphenolic content and antioxidant screening of 17 African propolis samples using RP-HPLC and spectroscopy

Mount Sinai and Cancer Research Institute team up to improve patient outcomes in immunotherapy

Suicide risk elevated among young adults with disabilities

Safeguarding Mendelian randomization: editorial urges rethink in methodological rigor

Using AI to find persuasive public health messages and automate real-time campaigns

Gene therapy for glaucoma

Teaching robots to build without blueprints

Negative perception of scientists working on AI

How disrupted daily rhythms can affect adolescent brain development

New use for old drug: study finds potential of heart drug for treating growth disorders

Head-to-head study shows bariatric surgery superior to GLP-1 drugs for weight loss

Psychiatric disorders less likely after weight-loss surgery than treatment with GLP-1s

The higher the body mass index, the higher the risk for complications after bariatric surgery

Black patients have higher rate of minor complications after metabolic and bariatric surgery than white patients

A revolution for R&D with the missing link of machine learning — project envisions human-AI expert teams to solve grand challenges

4 ERC Advanced Grants: 10 million Euro for ISTA

ERC awards €2.5 million to TIGEM scientist for project on programmable genetic circuits

Tree rings reveal increasing rainfall seasonality in the Amazon

Scientists find unexpected deep roots in plants

Researchers unveil the immune cells responsible for systemic sclerosis’s deadliest complications

New blood test holds potential to reduce liver transplant failures

Science clears the way to treating the trickiest bladder cancers

Drug treatment alters performance in a neural microphysiological system of information processing

[Press-News.org] In addiction, meditation is helpful when coupled with drug and cognitive therapies
A new paper suggests that rehabilitation strategies coupling meditation-like practices with drug and behavior therapies are more helpful than drug-plus-talk therapy alone when helping people overcome addiction