708 results on '"addictive"'
Search Results
2. Neural correlates of the addictions neuroclinical assessment (ANA) incentive salience factor among individuals with alcohol use disorder.
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Nieto, Steven, Grodin, Erica, and Ray, Lara
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Addictions Neuroclinical Assessment ,Alcohol use disorder ,Cue-reactivity ,Deep phenotyping ,Neuroimaging ,Humans ,Motivation ,Alcoholism ,Brain ,Alcohol Drinking ,Behavior ,Addictive ,Ethanol ,Cues ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging - Abstract
The Addictions Neuroclinical Assessment (ANA) is a recently-developed framework offering a more holistic understanding of three neurofunctional and behavioral domains that reflect the neurobiological dysfunction seen in alcohol use disorder (AUD). While the ANA domains have been well-validated across independent laboratories, there is a critical need to identify neural markers that subserve the proposed neurofunctional domains. The current study involves secondary data analysis of a two-week experimental medication trial of ibudilast (50 mg BID). Forty-five non-treatment-seeking participants with AUD (17F / 28 M) completed a battery of validated behavioral assessments forming the basis of their incentive salience factor score, computed via factor analysis, as well as a functional neuroimaging (fMRI) task assessing their neural reactivity to visual alcohol cues after being on placebo or ibudilast for 7 days. General linear models were conducted to examine the relationship between incentive salience and neural alcohol cue-reactivity in the ventral and dorsal stratum. Whole-brain generalized linear model analyses were conducted to examine associations between neural alcohol cue-reactivity and incentive salience. Age, sex, medication, and smoking status were included as covariates. Incentive salience was not associated with cue-elicited activation in the dorsal or ventral striatum. Incentive salience was significantly positively correlated (p < 0.05) with alcohol cue-elicited brain activation in reward-learning and affective regions including the insula and posterior cingulate cortices, bilateral precuneus, and bilateral precentral gyri. The ANA incentive salience factor is reflected in brain circuitry important for reward learning and emotion processing. Identifying a sub-phenotype of AUD characterized by increased incentive salience to alcohol cues allows for precision medicine approaches, i.e. treatments specifically targeting craving and reward from alcohol use. This study serves as a preliminary bio-behavioral validation for the incentive salience factor of the ANA. Further studies validating the neural correlates of other ANA factors, as well as replication in larger samples, appear warranted.
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- 2024
3. Lived Experience of Postpartum Women in Recovery for Opioid Use Disorder on Medication-Assisted Therapy.
- Author
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MacPherson, Caron
- Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this study was to understand the lived experiences of postpartum women on medication-assisted therapy for opioid use disorder. Study Design and Methods: van Manen's interpretive hermeneutic phenomenological design was used. Recruitment and data collection from seven participants occurred at an outpatient office offering care for perinatal patients on medication-assisted therapy for opioid use disorder. Data collection occurred between September 2021 and March 2022 via in-person interviews using a demographic data sheet, interview guide, speech recognition software, and digital recordings. Demographic data were analyzed using descriptive statistics. Qualitative data were analyzed using precoding, coding, and thematic analysis via van Manen's interpretive hermeneutic phenomenological method. Results: Seven themes were identified: troubled origins, used opioids to deal with life issues, needed to be self-reliant, opioid use disorder overtook their life, the baby was a motivator to seek treatment, the need for combined medication-assisted therapy and collaborative care , and hope for a better life. Clinical Nursing Implications: Nurses can provide trauma-informed care, support the importance of medication-assisted therapy in recovery, incorporate a collaborative care team with expertise in postpartum opioid use disorder, continue the collaborative care team for a minimum of 1 year, and advocate for the patient's role as parent. The lived experiences during pregnancy and postpartum of new mothers who are on medication assisted therapy for opioid use disorder are explored in this qualitative study. Suggestions for nursing care for this population are offered. Nurses can provide trauma informed care, support the importance of medication assisted therapy in recovery, incorporate a collaborative care team with expertise in postpartum opioid use disorder, continue the collaborative care team for a minimum of one year, and advocate for the patient's role as parent. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2025
- Full Text
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4. Current approaches to the identification and management of gambling disorder: a narrative review to inform clinical practice in Australia and New Zealand.
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Rodda, Simone N, Merkouris, Stephanie S, and Dowling, Nicki A
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Summary: Gambling disorder is a recognised psychiatric disorder in the Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders (DSM‐5) and is classified as an addiction alongside alcohol and substance use disorders. The DSM‐5 describes a past‐year timeframe, episodic or persistent specifiers, early or sustained remission specifiers, and three gambling disorder severity specifiers (mild, moderate and severe).Although anyone can develop gambling disorder, there are known risk factors. In studies involving general adult populations, the likelihood of developing the disorder varies with the type of gambling, and is particularly high for internet gambling, casino table games and poker machines.Australia and New Zealand have shifted the focus of gambling disorder to the identification of gambling harm, in recognition that efforts targeting the prevention of harm may be more effective as they potentially influence a larger segment of the population.Temporal categories of gambling harm (crisis harms versus legacy harms) affect help‐seeking and need for treatment. Crisis harms often motivate people to change their behaviour or seek help, whereas treatment addresses legacy harms, which emerge or continue to occur after gambling behaviour ceases.The evidence base and clinical guidelines recommend cognitive behavioural therapy and motivational interviewing but there are many gaps in our understanding of treatment for gambling disorder, including an absence of high quality evaluations that assess treatment effectiveness over the longer term, especially for treatment delivered in community settings. There is also an urgent need to understand how, why and for whom treatment works so that interventions can be optimised to individual needs, thereby facilitating client engagement.Because of limited access to health care and poor retention in treatment, in recent years there has been an increase in treatment choices in the form of internet therapies and smartphone applications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. Exposure to outdoor cigarette advertisements and cigarette retailers near Indonesian schools: Density, proximity, and students' self-report of exposure.
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Astutik, Erni, Megatsari, Hario, Gandeswari, Karin, Sebayang, Susy Katikana, Nadhiroh, Siti Rahayu, and Martini, Santi
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GLOBAL Positioning System ,TOBACCO products ,ADOLESCENT smoking ,SMOKING ,HEALTH behavior - Abstract
INTRODUCTION Adolescents are vulnerable to tobacco advertising, promotion, and sponsorships (TAPS). The presence of TAPS, specifically outdoor cigarette advertisements (OCA) and cigarette retailers (CR), impacts adolescent smoking behavior. This study examined the presence of OCA and CR near Indonesian schools and students' report of their TAPs exposure. METHODS We conducted a cross-sectional study in the three diverse districts (Serang, Banyuwangi, and East Lombok) and a city district (Padang), Indonesia on September 2022-April 2023. In each district, we selected the three subdistricts with the most schools and the highest population density. Enumerators mapped all outdoor OCA and CR using Global Positioning System (GPS) devices. In selected schools within the study areas, we surveyed 6715 students about their TAPs exposure using face-to-face interviews. Students were selected using multistage cluster sampling. Data were analyzed descriptively using STATA 14.2. RESULTS Of the 21460 retailers identified in the subdistricts, 30.4% were CR. The proportion of CR varied by district, between 24.8% and 40.7%. East Lombok had the highest percentage. Additionally, Banyuwangi had the highest density of CR. There were 13660 OCA points (district range 1918-6472). Around schools, banners were the most common OCA form (62.1%). Posters were second (32.8%). The retailers who sold the most cigarettes in the four districts were in kiosks. The density of CR and OCA per km2 increased as the distance from schools decreased. Students' self-reported exposure to tobacco products was higher from OCA and CR than from the internet, television, and magazines/newspapers. CONCLUSIONS OCA and CR are ubiquitous around schools. The Indonesian government should assess OCA and CR regulations and limit OCA and CR close to schools. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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6. Food Addiction.
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Krupa, Haley, Gearhardt, Ashley N., Lewandowski, Anne, and Avena, Nicole M.
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COMPULSIVE eating , *COMPULSIVE behavior , *OPIOID receptors , *REWARD (Psychology) , *BINGE-eating disorder - Abstract
In this review, we aim to draw a connection between drug addiction and overconsumption of highly palatable food (OHPF) by discussing common behaviors and neurochemical pathways shared by these two states. OHPF can stimulate reward pathways in the brain that parallel those triggered by drug use, increasing the risk of dependency. Behavioral similarities between food and drug addiction can be addressed by tracking their stages: loss of control when eating (bingeing), withdrawal, craving, sensitization, and cross-sensitization. The brain adapts to addiction by way of the mesolimbic dopamine system, endogenous opioids and receptors, acetylcholine and dopamine balance, and adaptations of serotonin in neuroanatomy. Studies from the current literature are reviewed to determine how various neurological chemicals contribute to the reinforcement of drug addiction and OHPF. Finally, protocols for treating food addiction are discussed, including both clinical and pharmacological modalities. There is consistent evidence that OHPF changes brain chemistry and leads to addiction in similar ways to drugs. However, more long-term research is needed on food addiction, binge eating, and their neurobiological effects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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7. Accelerating Solutions for the Overdose Crisis: an Effectiveness-Implementation Hybrid Protocol for the HEAL Prevention Cooperative.
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Patel, S, Cance, J, Bonar, E, Carter, P, Dickerson, D, Fiellin, L, Fernandes, C, Palimaru, A, Boomer, T, Saldana, L, Singh, R, Tinius, E, Walton, M, Youn, S, Young, S, Philbrick, S, and Lambdin, B
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Implementation ,Opioids ,Prevention ,Scale-up ,Youth ,Adolescent ,Young Adult ,Humans ,Drug Overdose ,Opioid-Related Disorders ,Behavior ,Addictive - Abstract
Given increasing opioid overdose mortality rates in the USA over the past 20 years, accelerating the implementation of prevention interventions found to be effective is critical. The Helping End Addiction Long-Term (HEAL) Prevention Cooperative (HPC) is a consortium of research projects funded to implement and test interventions designed to prevent the onset or escalation of opioid misuse among youth and young adults. The HPC offers a unique opportunity to synthesize and share lessons learned from participating research projects varied implementation experiences, which can facilitate quicker integration of effective prevention interventions into practice. This protocol paper describes our hybrid approach to collecting and analyzing information about the implementation experiences of nine of the HPC research projects while they maintain their focus on assessing the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of prevention interventions. To better understand implementation within this context, we will address five research questions: (1) What were the context and approach for implementing the prevention interventions, and how was the overall implementation experience? (2) How representative of the target population are the participants who were enrolled and retained in the research projects effectiveness trials? (3) For what purposes and how were stakeholders engaged by the research projects? (4) What are the adaptable components of the prevention interventions? And finally, (5) how might implementation of the prevention interventions vary for non-trial implementation? This work will result in intervention-specific and general practical dissemination resources that can help potential adopters and deliverers of opioid misuse prevention make adoption decisions and prepare for successful implementation.
- Published
- 2023
8. Including Community Partners in the Development and Adaptation of Intervention Strategies to Prevent Initiation or Escalation of Opioid Misuse.
- Author
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Perry, Rebecca, Elek, Elvira, DAmico, Elizabeth, Dickerson, Daniel, Komro, Kelli, Walton, Maureen, Razuri, Erin, Yule, Amy, Skinner, Juli, Pendergrass, Tyra, Larkin, Kaitlyn, Johnson, Carrie, Bonar, Erin, Oudekerk, Barbara, Hairgrove, Sara, Liu, Shirley, and Graham, Phillip
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Community engagement ,Implementation ,Opioids ,Partnerships ,Prevention ,Humans ,Opioid-Related Disorders ,Analgesics ,Opioid ,Community Participation ,Behavior ,Addictive - Abstract
Current literature lacks clear examples of how to engage with communities in the development of opioid misuse interventions for diverse populations and across various settings. The National Institutes of Health (NIH) Helping to End Addiction Long-term® Initiative (HEAL) Prevention Cooperative (HPC) research projects work collaboratively with communities to develop and adapt their opioid misuse interventions to increase both feasibility and sustainability. Ten HPC projects were selected to receive NIH funding and are required to have partnerships with communities where their intervention is being conducted. This paper applies the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)-adapted Public Participation Framework to examine the levels of community engagement used by each of these 10 HPC projects (Clinical and Translational Science Awards Consortium Community Engagement Key Function Committee Task Force on the Principles of Community Engagement, 2015). Using this framework, this paper illustrates the range of community engagement approaches and levels that the HPC projects rely on to develop, adapt, and adopt opioid prevention interventions across diverse populations and settings. This paper also lays a foundation for future examinations of the role of community engagement in intervention implementation and effectiveness and the level of community engagement that is necessary to improve intervention effectiveness.
- Published
- 2023
9. Brain-gut microbiome profile of neuroticism predicts food addiction in obesity: A transdiagnostic approach
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Zhang, Xiaobei, Bhatt, Ravi R, Todorov, Svetoslav, and Gupta, Arpana
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Neurosciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Mental Illness ,Nutrition ,Obesity ,Brain Disorders ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Mental Health ,Drug Abuse (NIDA only) ,Clinical Research ,Substance Misuse ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Good Health and Well Being ,Humans ,Neuroticism ,Food Addiction ,Gastrointestinal Microbiome ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Brain ,Behavior ,Addictive ,Omics ,Food addiction ,Brain-gut-microbiome ,Machine learning ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Psychiatry ,Biochemistry and cell biology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
Neuroticism is one of the most robust risk factors for addictive behaviors including food addiction (a key contributor to obesity), although the associated mechanisms are not well understood. A transdiagnostic approach was used to identify the neuroticism-related neuropsychological and gut metabolomic patterns associated with food addiction. Predictive modeling of neuroticism was implemented using multimodal features (23 clinical, 13,531 resting-state functional connectivity (rsFC), 336 gut metabolites) in 114 high body mass index (BMI ≥25 kg/m2) (cross-sectional) participants. Gradient boosting machine and logistic regression models were used to evaluate classification performance for food addiction. Neuroticism was significantly associated with food addiction (P
- Published
- 2023
10. A Mixed-methods Evaluation of an Addiction/Cardiology Pilot Clinic With Contingency Management for Patients With Stimulant-associated Cardiomyopathy.
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Mitchell, Andreas, Davis, Jonathan, Azari, Soraya, Leyde, Sarah, Abbs, Elizabeth, Suen, Leslie, and Martin, Marlene
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Humans ,Central Nervous System Agents ,Behavior ,Addictive ,Treatment Outcome ,Cardiomyopathies ,Heart Failure - Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Contingency management (CM) is one of the most effective treatments for stimulant use disorder but has not been leveraged for people with stimulant-associated cardiomyopathy (SA-CMP), a chronic health condition with significant morbidity and mortality. We aimed to determine the feasibility and acceptability of a multidisciplinary addiction/cardiology clinic with CM for patients with SA-CMP and to explore barriers and facilitators to engagement and recovery. METHODS: We recruited patients with a hospitalization in the past 6 months, heart failure with reduced ejection fraction (
- Published
- 2023
11. Awareness of Smoking Tobacco among Dental College Students: A Questionnairebased Cross-sectional Study
- Author
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Pallavi Singh, Meghna Mehta, Abhishek Awasthi, and Ashish Chauhan
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addictive ,hookah ,institutions ,prevalence ,professionals ,shisha ,Medicine - Abstract
Introduction: Tobacco smoking is one of the 10th leading health indicators proposed by the World Health Organisation (WHO) Healthy People 2020, with major concerns regarding increased mortality rates. Tobacco smoke contains 2.94 mg of nicotine, 802 mg of tar, 145 mg of carbon monoxide, and greater quantities of chrysene. Hookah tobacco poses a serious health threat because of the commonly held belief among college students that this tobacco product is not addictive. Assessing practices represents an important starting point in curbing the spread of tobacco use. It is crucial to understand the use, patterns, and dependence on tobacco to develop appropriate prevention and cessation strategies. Aim: To assess tobacco smoking-related knowledge, attitudes, and practices among students of dental Institutions in Lucknow city, Uttar Pradesh, India. Materials and Methods: A descriptive cross-sectional study was conducted among five dental colleges in Lucknow city from July 2023 to November 2023. A total of 1050 undergraduate dental students were included in the study, and a self-structured, close-ended questionnaire was used to collect information on the knowledge, attitudes, and practices of hookah tobacco. The reliability of the questionnaire was evaluated using Cronbach’s coefficient alpha to measure internal consistency, which was found to be 0.9. Discrete (categorical) data were summarised in numbers (n) and percentages (%). Categorical groups were compared by Chi-square (χ2) test. Results: Out of the total 1050 students, 392 (37.3%) were aged between 18-21 years, 630 (60.0%) were aged between 22-25 years, and 28 (2.7%) were aged between 26-30 years. Furthermore, among the students, 355 (33.8%) were females and 695 (66.2%) were males. Among the total of 1050 dental students, the prevalence of hookah smoking was 59.1%. The presence or prevalence of hookah smoking was higher in males (29.4%) at 480 (45.7%) than in females 141 (13.4%), and the difference was statistically significant (χ2=83.75, p
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- 2024
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12. An addiction‐based digital weight loss intervention: A multi‐centre randomized controlled trial
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Vidmar, Alaina P, Salvy, Sarah J, Wee, Choo Phei, Pretlow, Robert, Fox, D Steven, Yee, Jennifer K, Garell, Cambria, Glasner, Suzette, and Mittelman, Steven D
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,Health Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Obesity ,Prevention ,Nutrition ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Pediatric ,Oral and gastrointestinal ,Stroke ,Metabolic and endocrine ,Cardiovascular ,Cancer ,Good Health and Well Being ,Male ,Adolescent ,Humans ,Female ,Weight Loss ,Behavior ,Addictive ,Food ,Ethnicity ,binge eating disorder ,coaching ,digital health ,executive functioning ,food addiction ,obesity ,paediatrics ,weight loss ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
ObjectiveThis randomized clinical trial tested the effectiveness of an addiction-based digital weight-loss intervention, focusing on withdrawal/abstinence from self-identified problem foods, snacking and excessive amounts at meals, and discomfort displacement, with and without coaching, compared to an in-person, multi-disciplinary, care model among adolescents with obesity. We hypothesized that the digital intervention with coaching would yield greater weight loss and lower delivery burden than the standard clinical arm, and greater participant engagement than the digital arm without coaching.MethodsAdolescents were randomized to app intervention, with or without coaching, or in-person multidisciplinary obesity intervention for 6 months. The primary outcome was change in %BMIp95 at weeks 12 and 24. A mixed-effects linear regression model was used to assess the association between change in %BMIp95 and intervention arm. We were also interested in assessing delivery burden, participant engagement and evaluating the relationships between weight change and demographic characteristics, mood, executive function and eating behaviours.ResultsAll adolescents (n = 161; BMI ≥95th%, age 16 ± 2.5 year; 47% Hispanic, 65% female, 59% publicly insured) lost weight over 24-weeks (-1.29%, [-1.82, -0.76], p
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- 2023
13. Awareness of Smoking Tobacco among Dental College Students: A Questionnairebased Cross-sectional Study.
- Author
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SINGH, PALLAVI, MEHTA, MEGHNA, AWASTHI, ABHISHEK, and CHAUHAN, ASHISH
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DENTAL students ,SMOKING ,TOBACCO smoke ,ADOLESCENT smoking ,DENTAL schools ,COLLEGE students ,TOBACCO products - Abstract
Introduction: Tobacco smoking is one of the 10
th leading health indicators proposed by the World Health Organisation (WHO) Healthy People 2020, with major concerns regarding increased mortality rates. Tobacco smoke contains 2.94 mg of nicotine, 802 mg of tar, 145 mg of carbon monoxide, and greater quantities of chrysene. Hookah tobacco poses a serious health threat because of the commonly held belief among college students that this tobacco product is not addictive. Assessing practices represents an important starting point in curbing the spread of tobacco use. It is crucial to understand the use, patterns, and dependence on tobacco to develop appropriate prevention and cessation strategies. Aim: To assess tobacco smoking-related knowledge, attitudes, and practices among students of dental Institutions in Lucknow city, Uttar Pradesh, India. Materials and Methods: A descriptive cross-sectional study was conducted among five dental colleges in Lucknow city from July 2023 to November 2023. A total of 1050 undergraduate dental students were included in the study, and a self-structured, close-ended questionnaire was used to collect information on the knowledge, attitudes, and practices of hookah tobacco. The reliability of the questionnaire was evaluated using Cronbach’s coefficient alpha to measure internal consistency, which was found to be 0.9. Discrete (categorical) data were summarised in numbers (n) and percentages (%). Categorical groups were compared by Chi-square (χ2 ) test. Results: Out of the total 1050 students, 392 (37.3%) were aged between 18-21 years, 630 (60.0%) were aged between 22-25 years, and 28 (2.7%) were aged between 26-30 years. Furthermore, among the students, 355 (33.8%) were females and 695 (66.2%) were males. Among the total of 1050 dental students, the prevalence of hookah smoking was 59.1%. The presence or prevalence of hookah smoking was higher in males (29.4%) at 480 (45.7%) than in females 141 (13.4%), and the difference was statistically significant (χ2 =83.75, p<0.001). Conclusion: The study found that the frequency of hookah smoking continues to increase with the increasing age of the participants. The study also revealed the alarming situation of a high prevalence of hookah smoking among dental college students. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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14. Spray‐dried immobilized lipase from Staphylococcus aureusHA25 for application in detergent industry.
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Nadaroglu, Hayrunnisa, Baran, Alper, and Bayrakceken, Hatice
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LIPASES , *SPRAY drying , *IMMOBILIZED enzymes , *DETERGENTS , *STAPHYLOCOCCUS , *ALGINIC acid , *SCANNING electron microscopy - Abstract
This study aims to produce an active lipase detergent additive dry powder using spray drying. Staphylococcus aureus HA25, growing at a pH range of 5.0–8.5, was isolated from Erzurum gogermis cheese and purified using a three‐phase partitioning technique. Optimal immobilization processing conditions were determined for 0.1% wt/wt chitosan, alginate, and chitosan/alginate concentrations of pure lipase enzyme. Morphological features of the immobilized enzyme structure were determined using scanning electron microscopy (SEM) analysis, and structural characterizations were determined using x‐ray diffraction (XRD), Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy, and thermogravimetric (TG) analysis. The results showed that the natural structure of the lipase was largely restored upon reconstitution of the spray‐dried immobilized lipase structures in water. While the free enzyme removed 52.6% of the oil added to the cotton fabric, the immobilized lipase@alginate enzyme removed ~98% of the oil added to the cotton fabric at the highest rate when used as a detergent additive. It was found that the reusability activity of chitosan@lipase, alginate@lipase, and chitosan/alginate@lipase enzymes remained at 86.4%, 92.8%, and 88.6% of their original activity, respectively. The study suggests that immobilized variations of the lipase enzyme within chitosan, alginate, and chitosan/alginate matrices may serve as a natural, secure, and efficient substitute for conventional chemical detergents, offering a non‐toxic alternative for additive materials. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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15. Recent insights in the correlation between social media use, personality traits and exercise addiction: a literature review.
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Minutillo, Adele, Di Trana, Annagiulia, Aquilina, Valeria, Ciancio, Gerolama Maria, Berretta, Paolo, and La Maida, Nunzia
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EXERCISE addiction ,BODY image ,LITERATURE reviews ,PERSONALITY ,PERFECTIONISM (Personality trait) ,COMPULSIVE behavior ,SOCIAL media addiction - Abstract
Introduction and aim: The excessive involvement in physical activity without stopping in between sessions despite injuries, the continuous thinking to exercise feeling insane thoughts and experiencing withdrawal symptoms are all characteristics of the Exercise Addiction (EA), an addictive behavior. While the primary exercise addiction is directly caused by compulsive exercise, many studies highlighted the relationship between Eating Disorders (ED) and EA, defining the secondary EA. The correlation between EA, social media use (SMU) and other individual traits remains a relatively underexplored domain. Therefore, this review aimed to examine the latest evidence on the relationship between EA, SMU, and some personality traits such as perfectionism and body image. Methods: Electronic databases including PubMed, Medline, PsycARTICLES, Embase, Web of Science were searched from January 2019 to October 2023, following the PRISMA guidelines. Results: A total of 15 articles were examined and consolidated in this review. EA was found to be related to different individual traits such perfectionism, body dissatisfaction, depression, obsessive-compulsive personality disorders. While controversial results were found regarding the relationship between EA and SMU. Conclusion: The interaction between mental health, exercise addiction and social media use is complex. Excessive engagement in these latter may result in negative mental health consequences despite their potential benefits. Understanding individual differences and developing effective interventions is crucial to promoting healthy habits and mitigating the EA risks, ultimately enhancing mental well-being. Further research should focus on the identification of risks and protective factors with the eventual aim of developing and implementing effective prevention strategies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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16. Problematic social media use and alcohol expectancies in early adolescents
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Nagata, Jason M, Smith, Natalia, Zamora, Gabriel, Sajjad, Omar M, Ganson, Kyle T, Testa, Alexander, and Jackson, Dylan B
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Epidemiology ,Health Services and Systems ,Public Health ,Health Sciences ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Pediatric ,Women's Health ,Prevention ,Health Disparities ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Alcoholism ,Alcohol Use and Health ,Minority Health ,Substance Misuse ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adolescent ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Child ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Ethanol ,Alcohol Drinking ,Adolescent Development ,Behavior ,Addictive ,Social media ,Adolescents ,Alcohol expectancies ,Problematic media use ,Public Health and Health Services - Abstract
BackgroundAlcohol expectancies are beliefs regarding positive (e.g., tension reduction) or negative (e.g., loss of motor coordination) effects of alcohol. Based on Social Learning Theory, social media can influence alcohol expectancies in adolescents. In particular, problematic social media use - which can reflect elements of addiction, including mood modification, tolerance, withdrawal, conflict, and relapse - could be linked to alcohol expectancies. We aimed to determine the associations between problematic social media use and alcohol expectancies in a national (U.S.) cohort of 10-14-year-old early adolescents.MethodsWe analyzed cross-sectional data from the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study (N = 9,008) at the Year 2 assessment (2018-2020). Unadjusted and adjusted linear regression analyses were conducted to examine the associations between problematic social media use and alcohol expectancies (positive and negative), adjusting for race/ethnicity, sex, household income, parent education, sexual orientation, parental marital status, and study site. Furthermore, we computed marginal predicted probabilities to aid in interpreting findings.ResultsThe sample was 48.7% female and racially and ethnically diverse (43.0% non-White), with a mean age of 12.02 ± 0.66 years old. In models adjusted for confounders including both time spent on social media and problematic social media use, time spent on social media was not associated with positive or negative alcohol expectancies, but higher problematic social media use score was associated with higher positive (B = 0.045, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.020-0.069) and negative (B = 0.072, 95% CI 0.043-0.101) alcohol expectancies scores.ConclusionProblematic social media use was associated with both positive and negative alcohol expectancies in a demographically diverse national sample of early adolescents in the U.S. Given the small effect sizes of the current study, future studies should further examine these relationships prospectively, as well as the mechanisms linking problematic social media use to alcohol expectancies and alcohol consumption. Because alcohol expectancies are modifiable and linked with alcohol initiation, they could be a target for future prevention efforts.
- Published
- 2023
17. In-hospital Substance Use Policies: An Opportunity to Advance Equity, Reduce Stigma, and Offer Evidence-based Addiction Care.
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Martin, Marlene, Snyder, Hannah R, Otway, Gillian, Holpit, Leslie, Day, Lukejohn W, and Seidman, Dominika
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Humans ,Pain ,Substance-Related Disorders ,Behavior ,Addictive ,Hospitals ,Social Stigma ,Policy ,Drug Abuse (NIDA only) ,Substance Misuse ,Pain Research ,Clinical Research ,Health Services ,Chronic Pain ,Brain Disorders ,Health and social care services research ,8.3 Policy ,ethics ,and research governance ,8.1 Organisation and delivery of services ,Good Health and Well Being ,substance use disorder ,opioid use disorder ,hospital policy ,acute care ,addiction consult ,equity ,Public Health and Health Services ,Substance Abuse - Abstract
In-hospital substance use is common among patients with addiction because of undertreated withdrawal, undertreated pain, negative feelings, and stigma. Health care system responses to in-hospital substance use often perpetuate stigma and criminalization of people with addiction, long etched into our culture by the racist War on Drugs. In this commentary, we describe how our hospital convened an interprofessional workgroup to revise our in-hospital substance use policy. Our updated policy recommends health care workers respond to substance use concerns by offering patients adequate pain control, evidence-based addiction treatment, and supportive services instead of punitive responses. We provide best-practice recommendations for in-hospital substance use policies.
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- 2023
18. Meeting people where they are: implementing hospital-based substance use harm reduction
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Perera, Rachel, Stephan, Louise, Appa, Ayesha, Giuliano, Ro, Hoffman, Robert, Lum, Paula, and Martin, Marlene
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Health Services and Systems ,Nursing ,Health Sciences ,Health Disparities ,Drug Abuse (NIDA only) ,Clinical Research ,Substance Misuse ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Brain Disorders ,7.3 Management and decision making ,8.1 Organisation and delivery of services ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Behavior ,Addictive ,Harm Reduction ,Hospitals ,Humans ,Naloxone ,Substance-Related Disorders ,Harm reduction ,Addiction ,Safer use supplies ,Community engagement ,Health systems ,Public Health and Health Services ,Substance Abuse ,Health services and systems ,Public health - Abstract
BackgroundHospital-based addiction care focuses on assessing and diagnosing substance use disorders, managing withdrawal, and initiating medications for addiction treatment. Hospital harm reduction is generally limited to prescribing naloxone. Hospitals can better serve individuals with substance use disorders by incorporating harm reduction education and equipment provision as essential addiction care. We describe the implementation of a hospital intervention that provides harm reduction education and equipment (e.g., syringes, pipes, and fentanyl test strips) to patients via an addiction consult team in an urban, safety-net hospital.MethodsWe performed a needs assessment to determine patient harm reduction needs. We partnered with a community-based organization who provided us harm reduction equipment and training. We engaged executive, regulatory, and nursing leadership to obtain support. After ensuring regulatory compliance, training our team, and developing a workflow, we implemented this harm reduction program that provides education and equipment to individuals whose substance use goals do not include abstinence.ResultsDuring a 12-month period we provided 195 individuals harm reduction kits.ConclusionsThis intervention allowed us to advance hospital-based addiction care, better educate and engage patients, staff, and clinicians, and reduce stigma. By establishing a community harm reduction partner, obtaining support from hospital leadership, and incorporating feedback from staff, clinicians, and patients, we successfully implemented harm reduction education and equipment provision in a hospital setting as part of evidence-based addiction care.Trial registrationCommentary, none.
- Published
- 2022
19. When Should Patients With Less Than 6 Months Sobriety Be Transplanted?
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Keller, Nicky, Lewis, Allison, Zogran, Carol, Bullock, Sheila, and Flattery, Maureen
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SUBSTANCE abuse ,POSTOPERATIVE care ,HUMAN services programs ,COMPULSIVE behavior ,CIRRHOSIS of the liver ,UNEMPLOYMENT ,REHABILITATION ,TEMPERANCE ,ALCOHOLIC liver diseases ,DISEASE relapse ,HOUSING stability ,SOCIAL support ,LIVER transplantation ,TIME - Abstract
Alcoholic liver disease (ALD) and alcohol-induced deaths have increased dramatically over the last 2 decades. Patients are often referred to liver transplant programs critically ill with a life expectancy of less than 6 months. Historically, less than 6 months sobriety has been an absolute contraindication for transplant listing as ALD is stigmatized as a choice, as patients are responsible for their condition because they did not stop drinking. It has been recommended that 6 months of sobriety should not be considered the determining factor for access to transplantation. However, changing years of clinical practice involves developing new protocols, finding available resources, reworking systems, transforming team, and institutional culture. Steps taken by a large, urban, academic liver transplant program to develop a program for patients with end stage ALD with less than 6 months of sobriety are outlined. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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20. Cross-ancestry meta-analysis of opioid use disorder uncovers novel loci with predominant effects in brain regions associated with addiction
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Kember, Rachel L, Vickers-Smith, Rachel, Xu, Heng, Toikumo, Sylvanus, Niarchou, Maria, Zhou, Hang, Hartwell, Emily E, Crist, Richard C, Rentsch, Christopher T, Davis, Lea K, Justice, Amy C, Sanchez-Roige, Sandra, Kampman, Kyle M, Gelernter, Joel, and Kranzler, Henry R
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Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Drug Abuse (NIDA only) ,Genetics ,Opioid Misuse and Addiction ,Human Genome ,Neurosciences ,Substance Misuse ,Opioids ,Brain Disorders ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Behavior ,Addictive ,Brain ,Furin ,Genome-Wide Association Study ,Humans ,Opioid-Related Disorders ,Million Veteran Program ,Psychology ,Cognitive Sciences ,Neurology & Neurosurgery ,Biological psychology - Abstract
Despite an estimated heritability of ~50%, genome-wide association studies of opioid use disorder (OUD) have revealed few genome-wide significant loci. We conducted a cross-ancestry meta-analysis of OUD in the Million Veteran Program (N = 425,944). In addition to known exonic variants in OPRM1 and FURIN, we identified intronic variants in RABEPK, FBXW4, NCAM1 and KCNN1. A meta-analysis including other datasets identified a locus in TSNARE1. In total, we identified 14 loci for OUD, 12 of which are novel. Significant genetic correlations were identified for 127 traits, including psychiatric disorders and other substance use-related traits. The only significantly enriched cell-type group was CNS, with gene expression enrichment in brain regions previously associated with substance use disorders. These findings increase our understanding of the biological basis of OUD and provide further evidence that it is a brain disease, which may help to reduce stigma and inform efforts to address the opioid epidemic.
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- 2022
21. Association between smartphone overdependence and mental health in South Korean adolescents: a secondary data analysis.
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Yun, Hyeseon and Choi, Eun Kyoung
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COMPETENCY assessment (Law) ,STATISTICAL correlation ,CROSS-sectional method ,SCALE analysis (Psychology) ,SMARTPHONES ,COMPULSIVE behavior ,MENTAL health ,SECONDARY analysis ,RESEARCH funding ,MULTIPLE regression analysis ,SCIENTIFIC observation ,LONELINESS ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CHI-squared test ,PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation ,ODDS ratio ,PSYCHOLOGICAL stress ,RESEARCH ,ANXIETY disorders ,DATA analysis software ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors ,MENTAL depression ,EPIDEMIOLOGICAL research - Abstract
Purpose: The rising prevalence of smartphone overdependence among adolescents and its detrimental impact on mental health have become a growing concern. This study aimed to investigate the association between smartphone overdependence and the mental health of Korean adolescents. Methods: Participants were drawn from the 16th Korea Youth Risk Behavior Web-based Survey conducted in 2020. The dependent variable as smartphone overdependence, while the main exposure of interest was mental health, encompassing generalized anxiety disorder (GAD), perceived stress, sources of perceived stress, perceived loneliness, and perceived depressive symptoms. The study employed the Rao-Scott chi-square test and multiple logistic regression using IBM SPSS version 26.0. Results: The participants comprised 54,948 adolescents aged 13 to 18 years. Among them, 25.1% (n=13,775) were categorized as smartphone overdependence group. Specifically, 20.3% of adolescents who reported GAD ≥10 and 22.5% of those who reported experiencing high levels of perceived loneliness were identified as smartphone overdependent. The GAD increased a risk of smartphone overdependence by 2.61 times (95% confidence interval [95% CI]: 2.46--2.77). Perceived loneliness was associated with 1.98-fold (95% CI: 1.87-2.09) increased risk of smartphone overdependence. Additionally, conflict with peers was found to increase the risk of smartphone overdependence by 4.63-fold (95% CI: 3.89-5.52), followed by conflict with parents (odds ratio [OR]: 4.52, 95% CI: 3.84-5.31), and family environment (OR: 4.52, 95% CI: 3.75-5.46). Conclusion: The findings underscore a significant association between smartphone overdependence and mental health in Korean adolescents. Healthcare services to improve their emotional coping and interpersonal skills are necessary. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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22. Model melee: understanding models of addiction.
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Kalmowitz, Ezra
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ADDICTIONS ,COCAINE-induced disorders ,MENTAL health services administration - Abstract
This article explores different models of addiction and their implications for research and treatment. The brain disease model of addiction (BDMA) characterizes addiction as a chronic and relapsing neurobiological disease, while the choice model maintains that drug use is a voluntary choice. Animal models and evidence from addicted humans suggest that choice is maintained in addiction, as some addicted individuals choose abstinence and respond to contingency management treatments. The article argues for a paradigm shift towards comprehensive care strategies that prioritize psychological support and empower patients to choose valuable non-drug alternatives. The debate between these models has significant implications for addiction treatment and research funding. [Extracted from the article]
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- 2024
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23. Recent insights in the correlation between social media use, personality traits and exercise addiction: a literature review
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Adele Minutillo, Annagiulia Di Trana, Valeria Aquilina, Gerolama Maria Ciancio, Paolo Berretta, and Nunzia La Maida
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exercise addiction ,body image ,perfectionism ,behavior ,addictive ,Psychiatry ,RC435-571 - Abstract
Introduction and aimThe excessive involvement in physical activity without stopping in between sessions despite injuries, the continuous thinking to exercise feeling insane thoughts and experiencing withdrawal symptoms are all characteristics of the Exercise Addiction (EA), an addictive behavior. While the primary exercise addiction is directly caused by compulsive exercise, many studies highlighted the relationship between Eating Disorders (ED) and EA, defining the secondary EA. The correlation between EA, social media use (SMU) and other individual traits remains a relatively underexplored domain. Therefore, this review aimed to examine the latest evidence on the relationship between EA, SMU, and some personality traits such as perfectionism and body image.MethodsElectronic databases including PubMed, Medline, PsycARTICLES, Embase, Web of Science were searched from January 2019 to October 2023, following the PRISMA guidelines.ResultsA total of 15 articles were examined and consolidated in this review. EA was found to be related to different individual traits such perfectionism, body dissatisfaction, depression, obsessive-compulsive personality disorders. While controversial results were found regarding the relationship between EA and SMU.ConclusionThe interaction between mental health, exercise addiction and social media use is complex. Excessive engagement in these latter may result in negative mental health consequences despite their potential benefits. Understanding individual differences and developing effective interventions is crucial to promoting healthy habits and mitigating the EA risks, ultimately enhancing mental well-being. Further research should focus on the identification of risks and protective factors with the eventual aim of developing and implementing effective prevention strategies.
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- 2024
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24. Deep Learning dalam Prediksi Kebiasaan Merokok di Inggris Guna Mendukung Kebijakan Kesehatan Masyarakat yang Lebih Efektif
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Muhammad Arden Prabaswara, Kalistus Haris Pratama, Desva Fitranda Majid, and Febri Liantoni
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Smoke ,Predictions ,Deep Learning ,Tobacco ,Addictive ,Information technology ,T58.5-58.64 - Abstract
Smoking is a common practice throughout the world, where a person smokes and inhales the smoke produced from burning tobacco or other tobacco products. This action has become a significant global health issue because of the various health risks. This activity is often considered an addictive habit because nicotine, the psychoactive compound in tobacco, can cause physical and psychological dependence. This research applies Deep Learning methods to predict data on smoking habits in the UK. The dataset used in this research includes information about gender, age, marital status, highest level of education, nationality, ethnicity, income, and region. Through this research using Deep Learning methods, we can examine a complex data set that describes Smoking Habits in the UK. Based on trials with a dataset of 1,691 items, an accuracy of 78% was obtained. This research can provide important insights into the effectiveness of anti-smoking policies that have been implemented and help plan further actions to reduce the prevalence of smoking and its negative impact on society.
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- 2024
25. Applying the Addictions Neuroclinical Assessment to derive neurofunctional domains in individuals who use methamphetamine
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Nieto, Steven J and Ray, Lara A
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Applied and Developmental Psychology ,Biological Psychology ,Clinical and Health Psychology ,Psychology ,Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Brain Disorders ,Drug Abuse (NIDA only) ,Substance Misuse ,Neurosciences ,Mental Health ,Methamphetamine ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Alcoholism ,Behavior ,Addictive ,Humans ,Impulsive Behavior ,Motivation ,Methamphetamine use disorder ,Phenotyping ,Addiction ,Neuroscience ,Neurofunctional domains ,Addictions Neuroclinical Assessment ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Neurology & Neurosurgery ,Biological psychology - Abstract
The Addictions Neuroclinical Assessment (ANA) was proposed as a neuroscience-informed clinical framework to understand heterogeneity in addiction encompassing dysfunction in three domains: incentive salience, negative emotionality, and executive functions. The ANA has been validated in the alcohol field but has not been extended to other substances. Thus, the objective of the current study was to replicate and extend the ANA framework to methamphetamine use disorder. Non-treatment seeking individuals (N = 185) who reported regular methamphetamine use completed a deep phenotyping battery comprising self-report and behavioral measures that assessed methamphetamine craving and emotional withdrawal symptoms, mood and anxiety symptomatology, risk-taking behaviors, working memory, attention, and impulsivity. Factor analytic techniques were used in an iterative manner to derive latent factors that explained biobehavioral variation in the sample. The relationship between factor scores and demographic and clinical indicators of methamphetamine use were examined to assess the construct validity of the latent factors. Deep phenotyping combined with factor analytic techniques implicated three intercorrelated neurofunctional domains that map on to the proposed ANA domains: incentive salience, negative emotionality, and executive function. Each of the domains were associated with demographic and clinical indicators of methamphetamine use providing initial support for their construct validity. The ANA framework holds promise for explaining heterogeneity in addiction by identifying neuroscience-informed phenotypes. Knowledge from the ANA framework may be applied to advance precision medicine and inform medications development for a host of substance use disorders, particularly those with no approved pharmacotherapy such as methamphetamine.
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- 2022
26. Neurodevelopmental origins of substance use disorders: Evidence from animal models of early‐life adversity and addiction
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Levis, Sophia C, Baram, Tallie Z, and Mahler, Stephen V
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Biological Psychology ,Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Psychology ,Drug Abuse (NIDA only) ,Social Determinants of Health ,Substance Misuse ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Women's Health ,Brain Disorders ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Neurosciences ,2.3 Psychological ,social and economic factors ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Animals ,Female ,Male ,Behavior ,Addictive ,Models ,Animal ,Reward ,Rodentia ,Substance-Related Disorders ,Stress ,Psychological ,addiction ,early‐ ,life adversity ,reward circuits ,sex differences ,stress circuits ,early-life adversity ,Cognitive Sciences ,Neurology & Neurosurgery ,Biological psychology ,Cognitive and computational psychology - Abstract
Addiction is a chronic relapsing disorder with devastating personal, societal, and economic consequences. In humans, early-life adversity (ELA) such as trauma, neglect, and resource scarcity are linked with increased risk of later-life addiction, but the brain mechanisms underlying this link are still poorly understood. Here, we focus on data from rodent models of ELA and addiction, in which causal effects of ELA on later-life responses to drugs and the neurodevelopmental mechanisms by which ELA increases vulnerability to addiction can be determined. We first summarize evidence for a link between ELA and addiction in humans, then describe how ELA is commonly modeled in rodents. Since addiction is a heterogeneous disease with many individually varying behavioral aspects that may be impacted by ELA, we next discuss common rodent assays of addiction-like behaviors. We then summarize the specific addiction-relevant behavioral phenotypes caused by ELA in male and female rodents and discuss some of the underlying changes in brain reward and stress circuits that are likely responsible. By better understanding the behavioral and neural mechanisms by which ELA promotes addiction vulnerability, we hope to facilitate development of new approaches for preventing or treating addiction in those with a history of ELA.
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- 2022
27. A mathematical model of reward-mediated learning in drug addiction.
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Chou, Tom and DOrsogna, Maria
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Behavior ,Addictive ,Brain ,Humans ,Models ,Theoretical ,Motivation ,Reward ,Substance-Related Disorders - Abstract
Substances of abuse are known to activate and disrupt neuronal circuits in the brain reward system. We propose a simple and easily interpretable dynamical systems model to describe the neurobiology of drug addiction that incorporates the psychiatric concepts of reward prediction error, drug-induced incentive salience, and opponent process theory. Drug-induced dopamine releases activate a biphasic reward response with pleasurable, positive a-processes (euphoria, rush) followed by unpleasant, negative b-processes (cravings, withdrawal). Neuroadaptive processes triggered by successive intakes enhance the negative component of the reward response, which the user compensates for by increasing drug dose and/or intake frequency. This positive feedback between physiological changes and drug self-administration leads to habituation, tolerance, and, eventually, to full addiction. Our model gives rise to qualitatively different pathways to addiction that can represent a diverse set of user profiles (genetics, age) and drug potencies. We find that users who have, or neuroadaptively develop, a strong b-process response to drug consumption are most at risk for addiction. Finally, we include possible mechanisms to mitigate withdrawal symptoms, such as through the use of methadone or other auxiliary drugs used in detoxification.
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- 2022
28. Reduced sensitivity to delayed time and delayed reward of the post-operative insular glioma patients in delay discounting
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Fu, Wenjin, Huang, Zhenxing, Li, Jun, Dong, Qi, Li, Yang, Li, Gen, Xu, Yaokai, Xue, Bowen, Li, Zhenye, Chen, Chuansheng, Sun, Shengjun, Zhang, Yazhuo, Hou, Zonggang, and Xie, Jian
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Biological Psychology ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Psychology ,Drug Abuse (NIDA only) ,Substance Misuse ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Brain Disorders ,Clinical Research ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Neurosciences ,Good Health and Well Being ,Behavior ,Addictive ,Delay Discounting ,Glioma ,Humans ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Reward ,Decision making ,Delay discounting ,Insula ,Insular glioma ,Biological psychology ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
Previous studies have shown that the insula is closely related to addiction, and the structure's role in delay discounting can be measured by a specific task, but the specific role of the insula has been less studied. In this study, we first conducted a lesion study in which we recruited healthy controls (n = 30) and patients with unilateral insula injury (n = 16) to complete a behavioral delay discounting task. Then we conducted a functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) study, and a separate group healthy volunteers (n = 51) completed a delay discounting task during the fMRI scan. The lesion study showed a significant difference between the two groups in the delay discounting task, which revealed that insula injury was associated with impaired decision making. The fMRI study revealed choice-sensitive insula activation that was modulated by delayed time and delayed reward, indicating an important role of the insula in delay discounting. Overall, our results provide evidence for a role of the insular lobe in delay discounting and suggests that this structure may be considered an important factor in the future treatment and diagnosis of addiction disorders.
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- 2022
29. Individual differences in addiction-like behaviors and choice between cocaine versus food in Heterogeneous Stock rats
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Sedighim, Sharona, Carrette, Lieselot LG, Venniro, Marco, Shaham, Yavin, de Guglielmo, Giordano, and George, Olivier
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Biological Psychology ,Psychology ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Women's Health ,Neurosciences ,Drug Abuse (NIDA only) ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Substance Misuse ,Brain Disorders ,5.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Good Health and Well Being ,Animals ,Behavior ,Addictive ,Cocaine ,Cocaine-Related Disorders ,Individuality ,Rats ,Reward ,Self Administration ,Natural reward ,Preference ,Discrete choice ,Intoxication ,Self-administration ,Addiction ,Individual differences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Psychiatry ,Biological psychology - Abstract
Rationale and objectivesRecent studies reported that when given a mutually exclusive choice between cocaine and palatable food, most rats prefer the non-drug reward over cocaine. However, these studies used rat strains with limited genetic and behavioral diversity. Here, we used a unique outbred strain of rats (Heterogeneous Stock, HS) that mimic the genetic variability of humans.MethodsWe first identified individual differences in addiction-like behaviors (low and high). Next, we tested choice between cocaine and palatable food using a discrete choice procedure. We characterized the individual differences using an addiction score that incorporates key features of addiction: escalated intake, highly motivated responding (progressive ratio), and responding despite adverse consequences (footshock punishment). We assessed food versus cocaine choice at different drug-free days (without pre-choice cocaine self-administration) during acquisition of cocaine self-administration or after escalation of cocaine self-administration. We also assessed drug versus food choice immediately after 1-, 2-, or 6-h cocaine self-administration.ResultsIndependent of the addiction score, without pre-choice cocaine (1 or more abstinence days), HS rats strongly preferred the palatable food over cocaine, even if the food reward was delayed or its size was reduced. However, rats with high but not low addiction score modestly increased cocaine choice immediately after 1-, 2-, or 6-h cocaine self-administration.ConclusionsLike other strains, HS rats strongly prefer palatable food over cocaine. Individual differences in addiction score were associated with increased drug choice in the presence but not absence (abstinence) of cocaine. The HS strain may be useful in studies on mechanisms of addiction vulnerability.
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- 2021
30. Understanding e-Cigarette Addictiveness: Triangulation of Focus Group and Netnographic Data.
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Andreas, Marike, Grundinger, Nadja, Wolber, Nadine, Szafran, Daria, Görig, Tatiana, Mons, Ute, Lohner, Valerie, Vollstädt-Klein, Sabine, and Schneider, Sven
- Subjects
INTERNET forums ,ELECTRONIC cigarettes ,SMOKING cessation ,HEALTH policy ,FOCUS groups - Abstract
Background: Numerous studies have shown that e-cigarettes are addictive. For example, we previously showed that users of e-cigarette online forums discuss experiences of addiction in a netnographic analysis. However, it is unclear what makes e-cigarettes addictive apart from nicotine. In a focus group analysis, we recently identified 3 unique features of e-cigarettes that users linked to experiences of addiction: the pleasant taste, unobtrusiveness, and unlimited usability of e-cigarettes. Objective: This study aimed to validate the previously identified features of e-cigarette addictive potential by triangulating data from the netnographic analysis and focus group discussions. Methods: Drawing on a netnographic analysis of 3 popular, German-language e-cigarette forums, we studied whether experiences of addiction were linked to specific e-cigarette features. We included 451 threads in the analysis that had been coded for addictive experiences in a previous study by our team. First, we conducted a deductive analysis with preregistered codes to determine whether the features of pleasant taste, unobtrusiveness, and unlimited usability were mentioned in relation to the addictive potential of e-cigarettes in the online forums. Second, an inductive approach was chosen to identify further possible addictive features of e-cigarettes. Results: Our deductive analysis confirmed that the features highlighted in our previous focus group study (pleasant taste, unobtrusiveness, and unlimited usability) were also frequently discussed in online forums in connection to addictive symptoms. In addition, our inductive analysis identified nicotine dosage as a significant feature linked to addiction. Users reported varying their nicotine doses for different reasons, leading to the identification of four distinct user types based on dosing patterns: (1) high doses for intermittent, (2) high doses for constant use, (3) low doses for constant use, and (4) switching between high and low doses depending on the situation. Conclusions: Our comprehensive analysis of online forum threads revealed that users' experiences of addiction are linked to 4 specific features unique to e-cigarettes: pleasant taste, unobtrusiveness, unlimited usability, and nicotine dosage. Recognizing these addictive features of e-cigarettes is crucial for designing cessation programs and informing public health policies to reduce the addictiveness of e-cigarettes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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31. COVID-19–Related Social Isolation, Self-Control, and Internet Gaming Disorder Among Chinese University Students: Cross-Sectional Survey.
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Guo, Yufang, Yue, Fangyan, Lu, Xiangyu, Sun, Fengye, Pan, Meixing, and Jia, Yannan
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GAMING disorder ,COVID-19 pandemic ,SOCIAL isolation ,CHINESE-speaking students ,INTERNET in education - Abstract
Background: Internet gaming disorder among university students has become a great concern for university counsellors worldwide since the COVID-19 pandemic. The factors influencing the development of internet gaming disorder in students during the COVID-19 pandemic could be different from those before the pandemic. Objective: This study aims to explore the associations among social isolation, self-control, and internet gaming disorder in Chinese university students and to examine whether self-control mediates the positive effects of social isolation on internet gaming disorder. Methods: A cross-sectional survey was employed to collect data from university students in Shandong province of China from April to September 2022. The Isolation subscale of the Self-Compassion Scale, Self-Control Scale, and Internet Gaming Disorder Scale were used to assess the social isolation, self-control, and internet gaming disorder among university students, respectively. Models 4 and 5 of PROCESS software were used to analyze the mediating role of self-control and the moderating role of gender on the association between social isolation and internet gaming disorder. Results: A total of 479 students were recruited from 6 universities located in 3 different regions of Shandong, China. Students had low levels of internet gaming disorder and moderate levels of social isolation and self-control, with mean scores of 8.94 (SD 9.06), 12.04 (SD 3.53), and 57.15 (SD 8.44), respectively. Social isolation was positively correlated with internet gaming disorder (r =0.217; P <.001), and self-control was negatively correlated with social isolation (r =–0.355; P <.001) and internet gaming disorder (r =–0.260; P <.001). Self-control played a mediating role in the association between social isolation and internet gaming disorder (β=–.185, 95% CI –.295 to –.087). The effects of social isolation on internet gaming disorder among female students were lower than those among male students. Conclusions: Self-control was a mediator in the association between social isolation and internet gaming disorder. Moreover, gender played a moderating role in the association between social isolation and internet gaming disorder. This study highlights the need to alleviate the development of internet gaming disorder among students during a pandemic, especially that of male students. Effective interventions that lessen social isolation and promote self-control should be developed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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32. Web-Based Forums for People Experiencing Substance Use or Gambling Disorders: Scoping Review.
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Peart, Annette, Horn, Freya, Petukhova, Rachel, Barnett, Anthony, and Lubman, Dan I
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SUBSTANCE abuse ,AMED (Information retrieval system) ,COMPULSIVE behavior ,MEDICAL care ,AFFINITY groups ,CINAHL database ,GAMBLING ,INTERNET ,EVALUATION of medical care ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,PSYCHOLOGY of drug abusers ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,MEDLINE ,LITERATURE reviews ,SOCIAL support ,DATA analysis software ,PSYCHOLOGY information storage & retrieval systems - Abstract
Background: For people experiencing substance use or gambling disorders, web-based peer-supported forums are a space where they can share their experiences, gather around a collective goal, and find mutual support. Web-based peer support can help to overcome barriers to attending face-to-face meetings by enabling people experiencing addiction to seek support beyond their physical location and with the benefit of anonymity if desired. Understanding who participates in web-based peer-supported forums (and how), and the principles underpinning forums, can also assist those interested in designing or implementing similar platforms. Objective: This study aims to review the literature on how people experiencing substance use or gambling disorders, and their family, friends, and supporters, use and participate in web-based peer-supported forums. Specifically, we asked the following research questions: (1) What are the characteristics of people who use web-based peer-supported substance use or gambling-focused forums? (2) How do people participate in web-based peer-supported forums? (3) What are the key principles reportedly underpinning the web-based peer-supported forums? (4) What are the reported outcomes of web-based peer-supported forums? Methods: Inclusion criteria for our scoping review were peer-reviewed primary studies reporting on web-based addiction forums for adults and available in English. A primary search of 10 databases occurred in June 2021, with 2 subsequent citation searches of included studies in September 2022 and February 2024. Results: Of the 14 included studies, the majority of web-based peer-supported forums reported were aimed specifically for, or largely used by, people experiencing alcohol problems. Results from the 9 studies that did report demographic data suggest forum users were typically women, aged between 40 years and early 50 years. Participation in web-based peer-supported forums was reported quantitatively and qualitatively. The forums reportedly were underpinned by a range of key principles, mostly mutual help approaches and recovery identity formation. Only 3 included studies reported on outcomes for forum users. Conclusions: Web-based peer-supported forums are used by people experiencing addiction in a number of ways, to share information and experiences, and give and receive support. Seeking web-based support offers an alternative approach to traditional face-to-face support options, and may reduce some barriers to engaging in peer support. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
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33. Multivariate analysis of 1.5 million people identifies genetic associations with traits related to self-regulation and addiction
- Author
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Karlsson Linnér, Richard, Mallard, Travis T, Barr, Peter B, Sanchez-Roige, Sandra, Madole, James W, Driver, Morgan N, Poore, Holly E, de Vlaming, Ronald, Grotzinger, Andrew D, Tielbeek, Jorim J, Johnson, Emma C, Liu, Mengzhen, Rosenthal, Sara Brin, Ideker, Trey, Zhou, Hang, Kember, Rachel L, Pasman, Joëlle A, Verweij, Karin JH, Liu, Dajiang J, Vrieze, Scott, Kranzler, Henry R, Gelernter, Joel, Harris, Kathleen Mullan, Tucker-Drob, Elliot M, Waldman, Irwin D, Palmer, Abraham A, Harden, K Paige, Koellinger, Philipp D, and Dick, Danielle M
- Subjects
Biological Psychology ,Psychology ,Social Determinants of Health ,Brain Disorders ,Mental Health ,Drug Abuse (NIDA only) ,Mental Illness ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Human Genome ,Substance Misuse ,Neurosciences ,Opioids ,Genetics ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity ,Behavior ,Addictive ,Behavioral Symptoms ,Computational Biology ,Crime ,Genetic Association Studies ,Genome-Wide Association Study ,HIV Infections ,Humans ,Meta-Analysis as Topic ,Multifactorial Inheritance ,Multivariate Analysis ,Opioid-Related Disorders ,Reproducibility of Results ,Self-Control ,Suicide ,Unemployment ,COGA Collaborators ,Cognitive Sciences ,Neurology & Neurosurgery ,Biological psychology - Abstract
Behaviors and disorders related to self-regulation, such as substance use, antisocial behavior and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, are collectively referred to as externalizing and have shared genetic liability. We applied a multivariate approach that leverages genetic correlations among externalizing traits for genome-wide association analyses. By pooling data from ~1.5 million people, our approach is statistically more powerful than single-trait analyses and identifies more than 500 genetic loci. The loci were enriched for genes expressed in the brain and related to nervous system development. A polygenic score constructed from our results predicts a range of behavioral and medical outcomes that were not part of genome-wide analyses, including traits that until now lacked well-performing polygenic scores, such as opioid use disorder, suicide, HIV infections, criminal convictions and unemployment. Our findings are consistent with the idea that persistent difficulties in self-regulation can be conceptualized as a neurodevelopmental trait with complex and far-reaching social and health correlates.
- Published
- 2021
34. Alliances to disseminate addiction prevention and treatment (ADAPT): A statewide learning health system to reduce substance use among justice-involved youth in rural communities.
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Aalsma, Matthew C, Aarons, Gregory A, Adams, Zachary W, Alton, Madison D, Boustani, Malaz, Dir, Allyson L, Embi, Peter J, Grannis, Shaun, Hulvershorn, Leslie A, Huntsinger, Douglas, Lewis, Cara C, Monahan, Patrick, Saldana, Lisa, Schwartz, Katherine, Simon, Kosali I, Terry, Nicolas, Wiehe, Sarah E, and Zapolski, Tamika CB
- Subjects
Humans ,Substance-Related Disorders ,Program Evaluation ,Behavior ,Addictive ,Adolescent ,Rural Population ,Learning Health System ,Juvenile justice ,Learning health system ,Substance use disorders ,Drug Abuse (NIDA only) ,Prevention ,Substance Misuse ,Clinical Research ,Health Services ,Pediatric ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Mental Health ,Brain Disorders ,Pediatric Research Initiative ,Health and social care services research ,8.1 Organisation and delivery of services ,Good Health and Well Being ,Public Health and Health Services ,Psychology ,Substance Abuse - Abstract
BackgroundYouth in the justice system (YJS) are more likely than youth who have never been arrested to have mental health and substance use problems. However, a low percentage of YJS receive SUD services during their justice system involvement. The SUD care cascade can identify potential missed opportunities for treatment for YJS. Steps along the continuum of the cascade include identification of treatment need, referral to services, and treatment engagement. To address gaps in care for YJS, we will (1) implement a learning health system (LHS) to develop, or improve upon, alliances between juvenile justice (JJ) agencies and community mental health centers (CMHC) and (2) present local cascade data during continuous quality improvement cycles within the LHS alliances.Methods/designADAPT is a hybrid Type II effectiveness implementation trial. We will collaborate with JJ and CMHCs in eight Indiana counties. Application of the EPIS (exploration, preparation, implementation, and sustainment) framework will guide the implementation of the LHS alliances. The study team will review local cascade data quarterly with the alliances to identify gaps along the continuum. The study will collect self-report survey measures longitudinally at each site regarding readiness for change, implementation climate, organizational leadership, and program sustainability. The study will use the Stages of Implementation Completion (SIC) tool to assess the process of implementation across interventions. Additionally, the study team will conduct focus groups and qualitative interviews with JJ and CMHC personnel across the intervention period to assess for impact.DiscussionFindings have the potential to increase SUD need identification, referral to services, and treatment for YJS.
- Published
- 2021
35. Mapping cortical and subcortical asymmetries in substance dependence: Findings from the ENIGMA Addiction Working Group
- Author
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Cao, Zhipeng, Ottino‐Gonzalez, Jonatan, Cupertino, Renata B, Schwab, Nathan, Hoke, Colin, Catherine, Orr, Cousijn, Janna, Dagher, Alain, Foxe, John J, Goudriaan, Anna E, Hester, Robert, Hutchison, Kent, Li, Chiang‐Shan R, London, Edythe D, Lorenzetti, Valentina, Luijten, Maartje, Martin‐Santos, Rocio, Momenan, Reza, Paulus, Martin P, Schmaal, Lianne, Sinha, Rajita, Sjoerds, Zsuzsika, Solowij, Nadia, Stein, Dan J, Stein, Elliot A, Uhlmann, Anne, Holst, Ruth J, Veltman, Dick J, Wiers, Reinout W, Yücel, Murat, Zhang, Sheng, Jahanshad, Neda, Thompson, Paul M, Conrod, Patricia, Mackey, Scott, and Garavan, Hugh
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Biological Psychology ,Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Psychology ,Substance Misuse ,Drug Abuse (NIDA only) ,Neurosciences ,Brain Disorders ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Adult ,Alcoholism ,Behavior ,Addictive ,Brain ,Brain Cortical Thickness ,Cerebellar Cortex ,Female ,Humans ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Neuroimaging ,Nucleus Accumbens ,Substance-Related Disorders ,Tobacco Use Disorder ,Young Adult ,brain asymmetry ,mega-analysis ,substance dependence ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Substance Abuse ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences - Abstract
Brain asymmetry reflects left-right hemispheric differentiation, which is a quantitative brain phenotype that develops with age and can vary with psychiatric diagnoses. Previous studies have shown that substance dependence is associated with altered brain structure and function. However, it is unknown whether structural brain asymmetries are different in individuals with substance dependence compared with nondependent participants. Here, a mega-analysis was performed using a collection of 22 structural brain MRI datasets from the ENIGMA Addiction Working Group. Structural asymmetries of cortical and subcortical regions were compared between individuals who were dependent on alcohol, nicotine, cocaine, methamphetamine, or cannabis (n = 1,796) and nondependent participants (n = 996). Substance-general and substance-specific effects on structural asymmetry were examined using separate models. We found that substance dependence was significantly associated with differences in volume asymmetry of the nucleus accumbens (NAcc; less rightward; Cohen's d = 0.15). This effect was driven by differences from controls in individuals with alcohol dependence (less rightward; Cohen's d = 0.10) and nicotine dependence (less rightward; Cohen's d = 0.11). These findings suggest that disrupted structural asymmetry in the NAcc may be a characteristic of substance dependence.
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- 2021
36. On the early life origins of vulnerability to opioid addiction
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Levis, Sophia C, Bentzley, Brandon S, Molet, Jenny, Bolton, Jessica L, Perrone, Christina R, Baram, Tallie Z, and Mahler, Stephen V
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Biological Psychology ,Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Psychology ,Opioids ,Neurosciences ,Opioid Misuse and Addiction ,Substance Misuse ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Brain Disorders ,Prescription Drug Abuse ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Social Determinants of Health ,Drug Abuse (NIDA only) ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Good Health and Well Being ,Analgesics ,Opioid ,Animals ,Behavior ,Addictive ,Female ,Opioid-Related Disorders ,Origin of Life ,Rats ,Reward ,Biological Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Psychiatry ,Clinical sciences ,Biological psychology ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
The origins and neural bases of the current opioid addiction epidemic are unclear. Genetics plays a major role in addiction vulnerability, but cannot account for the recent exponential rise in opioid abuse, so environmental factors must contribute. Individuals with history of early life adversity (ELA) are disproportionately prone to opioid addiction, yet whether ELA interacts with factors such as increased access to opioids to directly influence brain development and function, and cause opioid addiction vulnerability, is unknown. We simulated ELA in female rats and this led to a striking opioid addiction-like phenotype. This was characterized by resistance to extinction, increased relapse-like behavior, and, as in addicted humans, major increases in opioid economic demand. By contrast, seeking of a less salient natural reward was unaffected by ELA, whereas demand for highly palatable treats was augmented. These discoveries provide novel insights into the origins and nature of reward circuit malfunction that may set the stage for addiction.
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- 2021
37. Distinct motivations to seek out information in healthy individuals and problem gamblers.
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Dezza, Irene Cogliati, Noel, Xavier, Cleeremans, Axel, and Yu, Angela J
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Humans ,Behavior ,Addictive ,Gambling ,Motivation ,Health Status ,Clinical Sciences ,Public Health and Health Services ,Psychology - Abstract
As massive amounts of information are becoming available to people, understanding the mechanisms underlying information-seeking is more pertinent today than ever. In this study, we investigate the underlying motivations to seek out information in healthy and addicted individuals. We developed a novel decision-making task and a novel computational model which allows dissociating the relative contribution of two motivating factors to seek out information: a desire for novelty and a general desire for knowledge. To investigate whether/how the motivations to seek out information vary between healthy and addicted individuals, in addition to healthy controls we included a sample of individuals with gambling disorder-a form of addiction without the confound of substance consumption and characterized by compulsive gambling. Our results indicate that healthy subjects and problem gamblers adopt distinct information-seeking "modes". Healthy information-seeking behavior was mostly motivated by a desire for novelty. Problem gamblers, on the contrary, displayed reduced novelty-seeking and an increased desire for accumulating knowledge compared to healthy controls. Our findings not only shed new light on the motivations driving healthy and addicted individuals to seek out information, but they also have important implications for the treatment and diagnosis of behavioral addiction.
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- 2021
38. Oxycodone in the Opioid Epidemic: High ‘Liking’, ‘Wanting’, and Abuse Liability
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Kibaly, Cherkaouia, Alderete, Jacob A, Liu, Steven H, Nasef, Hazem S, Law, Ping-Yee, Evans, Christopher J, and Cahill, Catherine M
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Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Opioids ,Opioid Misuse and Addiction ,Drug Abuse (NIDA only) ,Chronic Pain ,Substance Misuse ,Pain Research ,Prescription Drug Abuse ,Neurosciences ,Brain Disorders ,6.1 Pharmaceuticals ,5.1 Pharmaceuticals ,Good Health and Well Being ,Analgesics ,Opioid ,Animals ,Behavior ,Addictive ,Humans ,Opioid Epidemic ,Opioid-Related Disorders ,Oxycodone ,Pain ,Reward ,Likability ,Incentive salience ,Allosteric site ,Dopamine ,Biochemistry and Cell Biology ,Neurology & Neurosurgery ,Biochemistry and cell biology - Abstract
It is estimated that nearly a third of people who abuse drugs started with prescription opioid medicines. Approximately, 11.5 million Americans used prescription drugs recreationally in 2016, and in 2018, 46,802 Americans died as the result of an opioid overdose, including prescription opioids, heroin, and illicitly manufactured fentanyl (National Institutes on Drug Abuse (2020) Opioid Overdose Crisis. https://www.drugabuse.gov/drugs-abuse/opioids/opioid-overdose-crisis . Accessed 06 June 2020). Yet physicians will continue to prescribe oral opioids for moderate-to-severe pain in the absence of alternative therapeutics, underscoring the importance in understanding how drug choice can influence detrimental outcomes. One of the opioid prescription medications that led to this crisis is oxycodone, where misuse of this drug has been rampant. Being one of the most highly prescribed opioid medications for treating moderate-to-severe pain as reflected in the skyrocketed increase in retail sales of 866% between 1997 and 2007, oxycodone was initially suggested to be less addictive than morphine. The false-claimed non-addictive formulation of oxycodone, OxyContin, further contributed to the opioid crisis. Abuse was often carried out by crushing the pills for immediate burst release, typically by nasal insufflation, or by liquefying the pills for intravenous injection. Here, we review oxycodone pharmacology and abuse liability as well as present the hypothesis that oxycodone may exhibit a unique pharmacology that contributes to its high likability and abuse susceptibility. We will discuss various mechanisms that likely contribute to the high abuse rate of oxycodone including clinical drug likability, pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics, differences in its actions within mesolimbic reward circuity compared to other opioids, and the possibility of differential molecular and cellular receptor interactions that contribute to its selective effects. We will also discuss marketing strategies and drug difference that likely contributes to the oxycodone opioid use disorders and addiction.
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- 2021
39. The Cocaine and Oxycodone Biobanks, Two Repositories from Genetically Diverse and Behaviorally Characterized Rats for the Study of Addiction
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Carrette, Lieselot LG, de Guglielmo, Giordano, Kallupi, Marsida, Maturin, Lisa, Brennan, Molly, Boomhower, Brent, Conlisk, Dana, Sedighim, Sharona, Tieu, Lani, Fannon, McKenzie J, Velarde, Nathan, Martinez, Angelica R, Kononoff, Jenni, Kimbrough, Adam, Simpson, Sierra, Smith, Lauren C, Shankar, Kokila, Ramirez, Francisco J, Chitre, Apurva S, Lin, Bonnie, Polesskaya, Oksana, Woods, Leah C Solberg, Palmer, Abraham A, and George, Olivier
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Biological Psychology ,Medical Biochemistry and Metabolomics ,Psychology ,Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Neurosciences ,Substance Misuse ,Genetics ,Brain Disorders ,Drug Abuse (NIDA only) ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Animals ,Behavior ,Addictive ,Biological Specimen Banks ,Cocaine ,Cocaine-Related Disorders ,Oxycodone ,Rats ,Rats ,Sprague-Dawley ,Self Administration ,psychostimulant ,opioid ,substance-related disorders ,biological specimen banks ,outbred strains - Abstract
The rat oxycodone and cocaine biobanks contain samples that vary by genotypes (by using genetically diverse genotyped HS rats), phenotypes (by measuring addiction-like behaviors in an advanced SA model), timepoints (samples are collected longitudinally before, during, and after SA, and terminally at three different timepoints in the addiction cycle: intoxication, withdrawal, and abstinence or without exposure to drugs through age-matched naive rats), samples collected (organs, cells, biofluids, feces), preservation (paraformaldehyde-fixed, snap-frozen, or cryopreserved) and application (proteomics, transcriptomics, microbiomics, metabolomics, epigenetics, anatomy, circuitry analysis, biomarker discovery, etc.Substance use disorders (SUDs) are pervasive in our society and have substantial personal and socioeconomical costs. A critical hurdle in identifying biomarkers and novel targets for medication development is the lack of resources for obtaining biological samples with a detailed behavioral characterization of SUD. Moreover, it is nearly impossible to find longitudinal samples. As part of two ongoing large-scale behavioral genetic studies in heterogeneous stock (HS) rats, we have created two preclinical biobanks using well-validated long access (LgA) models of intravenous cocaine and oxycodone self-administration (SA) and comprehensive characterization of addiction-related behaviors. The genetic diversity in HS rats mimics diversity in the human population and includes individuals that are vulnerable or resilient to compulsive-like responding for cocaine or oxycodone. Longitudinal samples are collected throughout the experiment, before exposure to the drug, during intoxication, acute withdrawal, and protracted abstinence, and include naive, age-matched controls. Samples include, but are not limited to, blood plasma, feces and urine, whole brains, brain slices and punches, kidney, liver, spleen, ovary, testis, and adrenal glands. Three preservation methods (fixed in formaldehyde, snap-frozen, or cryopreserved) are used to facilitate diverse downstream applications such as proteomics, metabolomics, transcriptomics, epigenomics, microbiomics, neuroanatomy, biomarker discovery, and other cellular and molecular approaches. To date, >20,000 samples have been collected from over 1000 unique animals and made available free of charge to non-profit institutions through https://www.cocainebiobank.org/ and https://www.oxycodonebiobank.org/.
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- 2021
40. Perspectives of Medical Students’ Tendency toward Waterpipe Tobacco Smoking: A Qualitative Research
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Abdolghani Abdollahimohammad and Mohammadreza Firouzkouhi
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water pipe smoking ,tobacco ,medical students ,addictive ,qualitative research ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Background: Water pipe tobacco smoking is used as a traditional way of smoking, but its ascending trend and increasing consumption has become a global phenomenon, which has been associated with increased consumption of fruity or flavored tobaccos. Given the students’ increasing tendency in this regard, this study aimed to explore the medical students’ tendency toward using waterpipe tobacco smoking.Methods: This is a qualitative study using a semi-structured interview with 16 medical students in Southeastern Iran (Zabol) from January to May 2020. The data were analyzed using a thematic analysis approach.Results: Data analysis led to the extraction of 4 themes of “cultural/ family roots”, “individual roots”, “attraction of tobacco flavor and water pipe”, and “misconception about health risks of water pipe tobacco smoking”.Conclusion: Waterpipe tobacco smoking has increased among students for leisure and entertainment. Given that waterpipe tobacco smoking is the basis for entering various opioid addictions and cigarettes, it needs more attention to students from the academic side of principals and families. It is recommended that national and academic authorities should consider the issues that attract the students toward water pipe tobacco smoking.
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- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Evaluation of the Addictions Neuroclinical Assessment (ANA) framework through deep phenotyping of problem drinkers.
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Nieto, Steven J, Grodin, Erica N, Green, ReJoyce, and Ray, Lara A
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Humans ,Alcoholism ,Alcohol Drinking ,Impulsive Behavior ,Behavior ,Addictive ,Motivation ,Adult ,Female ,Male ,Executive Function ,Addiction cycle ,Addictions Neuroclinical Assessment ,Alcohol use disorder ,Neuroscience ,Phenotyping ,Neurosciences ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Substance Misuse ,Alcoholism ,Alcohol Use and Health ,Brain Disorders ,Mental Health ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Substance Abuse - Abstract
BackgroundTo advance the development of a neuroscience-informed understanding of alcohol use disorder (AUD) through the Addictions Neuroclinical Assessment (ANA) framework, the present study reports on deep phenotyping of a large sample of problem drinkers.MethodsParticipants (n = 1679) were primarily heavy drinkers with and without AUD, who completed a phenotypic battery of well-validated scales and behavioral measures of alcohol use and problems, mood, attention, and impulsivity. These scales were subjected to sequential factor analytic work in order to derive a factor solution that explains biobehavioral variation in the sample. To assess the construct validity of the resulting factor solution, scores on each factor were associated with demographic and clinical indicators.ResultsFactor analysis techniques using indicators of alcohol use and problems, mood, attention, and impulsivity implicated four functional domains that compliment and extend the proposed ANA domains: negative alcohol-related consequences, incentive salience, negative emotionality, and executive function. Demographic and clinical variables significantly predicted scores on all ANA domains.ConclusionsThis study provides an independent test of the recently proposed neuroscience-based ANA framework. Results largely support the novel approach in identifying four core constructs in problem drinkers. Future studies can deepen our understanding of how these domains are relevant to AUD by incorporating biomarkers.
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- 2021
42. Sex‐dependent effects of an Hnrnph1 mutation on fentanyl addiction‐relevant behaviors but not antinociception in mice
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Bryant, Camron D, Healy, Aidan F, Ruan, Qiu T, Coehlo, Michal A, Lustig, Elijah, Yazdani, Neema, Luttik, Kimberly P, Tran, Tori, Swancy, Isaiah, Brewin, Lindsey W, Chen, Melanie M, and Szumlinski, Karen K
- Subjects
Neurosciences ,Drug Abuse (NIDA only) ,Methamphetamine ,Genetics ,Substance Misuse ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Brain Disorders ,Behavioral and Social Science ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Aetiology ,Mental health ,Generic health relevance ,Good Health and Well Being ,Analgesics ,Opioid ,Animals ,Fentanyl ,Heterogeneous-Nuclear Ribonucleoproteins ,Male ,Mice ,Mice ,Inbred C57BL ,Motor Activity ,Mutation ,Nociception ,Opioid-Related Disorders ,Reward ,Sex Factors ,addictive ,analgesia ,opiate ,pain ,psychostimulant ,Biological Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Neurology & Neurosurgery - Abstract
Opioid Use Disorder (OUD) and opioid-related deaths remain a major public health concern in the United States. Both environmental and genetic factors influence risk for OUD. We previously identified Hnrnph1 as a quantitative trait gene underlying the stimulant, rewarding, and reinforcing properties of methamphetamine. Prior work shows that hnRNP H1, the RNA-binding protein encoded by Hnrnph1, post-transcriptionally regulates Oprm1 (mu opioid receptor gene)-the primary molecular target for the therapeutic and addictive properties of opioids. Because genetic variants can exert pleiotropic effects on behaviors induced by multiple drugs of abuse, in the current study, we tested the hypothesis that Hnrnph1 mutants would show reduced behavioral sensitivity to the mu opioid receptor agonist fentanyl. Hnrnph1 mutants showed reduced sensitivity to fentanyl-induced locomotor activity, along with a female-specific reduction in, and a male-specific induction of, locomotor sensitization following three, daily injections (0.2 mg/kg, i.p.). Hnrnph1 mutants also required a higher dose of fentanyl to exhibit opioid reward as measured via conditioned place preference (CPP). Male Hnrnph1 mutants showed reduced fentanyl reinforcement. Hnrnph1 mutants also showed reduced sucrose motivation, suggesting a reward deficit. No genotypic differences were observed in baseline thermal nociception, fentanyl-induced antinociception, physical or negative affective signs of opioid dependence, or in sensorimotor gating. In the context of our prior work, these findings suggest that Hnrnph1 dysfunction exerts a selective role in reducing the addiction liability to drugs of abuse (opioids and psychostimulants), which could provide new biological pathways to improve their therapeutic profiles.
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- 2021
43. Different Effects of Alcohol Exposure on Action and Outcome Related Orbitofrontal Cortex Activity
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Cazares, Christian, Schreiner, Drew C, and Gremel, Christina M
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Biological Psychology ,Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Psychology ,Alcoholism ,Alcohol Use and Health ,Brain Disorders ,Neurosciences ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Substance Misuse ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Alcoholism ,Animals ,Behavior ,Addictive ,Ethanol ,Mice ,Mice ,Inbred C57BL ,Prefrontal Cortex ,action ,alcohol ,compulsive ,dependence ,devaluation ,orbitofrontal cortex - Abstract
Alcohol dependence can result in long-lasting deficits to decision-making and action control. Neurobiological investigations have identified orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) as important for outcome-related contributions to goal-directed actions during decision-making. Prior work has shown that alcohol dependence induces long-lasting changes to OFC function that persist into protracted withdrawal and disrupts goal-directed control over actions. However, it is unclear whether these changes in function alter representation of action and outcome-related neural activity in OFC. Here, we used the well-validated chronic intermittent ethanol (CIE) exposure and withdrawal procedure to model alcohol dependence in mice and performed in vivo extracellular recordings during an instrumental task in which lever-press actions made for a food outcome. We found alcohol dependence disrupted goal-directed action control and increased OFC activity associated with lever-pressing but decreased OFC activity during outcome-related epochs. The ability to decode outcome-related information, but not action information, from OFC activity following CIE exposure was reduced. Hence, chronic alcohol exposure induced a long-lasting disruption to OFC function such that activity associated with actions was enhanced, but OFC activity contributions to outcome-related information was diminished. This has important implications for hypotheses regarding compulsive and habitual phenotypes observed in addiction.
- Published
- 2021
44. White matter microstructural and Compulsive Sexual Behaviors Disorder - Diffusion Tensor Imaging study.
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Draps, Małgorzata, Kowalczyk-Grębska, Natalia, Marchewka, Artur, Shi, Feng, and Gola, Mateusz
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Compulsive Sexual Behaviors Disorder ,Diffusion Tensor Imaging ,Obssesive-Compulsive Disorder ,addictions ,hypersexuality ,white matter microstructure ,Adult ,Anisotropy ,Behavior ,Addictive ,Brain ,Diffusion Tensor Imaging ,Humans ,International Classification of Diseases ,Male ,Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder ,Sexual Behavior ,White Matter - Abstract
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Even though the Compulsive Sexual Behavior Disorder (CSBD) was added to the ICD-11 under the impulse control category in 2019, its neural mechanisms are still debated. Researchers have noted its similarity both to addiction and to Obssesive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD). The aim of our study was to address this question by investigating the pattern of anatomical brain abnormalities among CSBD patients. METHODS: Reviewing 39 publications on Diffusion Tensor Imaging (DTI) we have identified main abnormalities specific for addictions and OCD. Than we have collected DTI data from 36 heterosexual males diagnosed with CSBD and 31 matched healthy controls. These results were then compared to the addiction and OCD patterns. RESULTS: Compared to controls, CSBD individuals showed significant fractional anisotropy (FA) reduction in the superior corona radiata tract, the internal capsule tract, cerebellar tracts and occipital gyrus white matter. Interestingly, all these regions were also identified in previous studies as shared DTI correlates in both OCD and addiction. DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSIONS: Results of our study suggest that CSBD shares similar pattern of abnormalities with both OCD and addiction. As one of the first DTI study comparing structural brain differences between CSBD, addictions and OCD, although it reveals new aspects of CSBD, it is insufficient to determine whether CSBD resembles more an addiction or OCD. Further research, especially comparing directly individuals with all three disorders may provide more conclusive results.
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- 2021
45. A non-hallucinogenic psychedelic analogue with therapeutic potential
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Cameron, Lindsay P, Tombari, Robert J, Lu, Ju, Pell, Alexander J, Hurley, Zefan Q, Ehinger, Yann, Vargas, Maxemiliano V, McCarroll, Matthew N, Taylor, Jack C, Myers-Turnbull, Douglas, Liu, Taohui, Yaghoobi, Bianca, Laskowski, Lauren J, Anderson, Emilie I, Zhang, Guoliang, Viswanathan, Jayashri, Brown, Brandon M, Tjia, Michelle, Dunlap, Lee E, Rabow, Zachary T, Fiehn, Oliver, Wulff, Heike, McCorvy, John D, Lein, Pamela J, Kokel, David, Ron, Dorit, Peters, Jamie, Zuo, Yi, and Olson, David E
- Subjects
Biological Psychology ,Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Psychology ,Opioids ,Neurosciences ,Substance Misuse ,Brain Disorders ,Drug Abuse (NIDA only) ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Alcoholism ,Animals ,Antidepressive Agents ,Arrhythmias ,Cardiac ,Behavior ,Addictive ,Chemistry Techniques ,Synthetic ,Depression ,Disease Models ,Animal ,Drug Design ,Female ,Hallucinogens ,Heroin Dependence ,Ibogaine ,Male ,Mice ,Mice ,Inbred C57BL ,Neuronal Plasticity ,Patient Safety ,Receptor ,Serotonin ,5-HT2A ,Serotonin 5-HT2 Receptor Agonists ,Substance-Related Disorders ,Swimming ,Tabernaemontana ,Estrogen ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Opioid Misuse and Addiction ,Women's Health ,Behavior ,Animal ,Conditioning ,Operant ,Drug-Seeking Behavior ,Estradiol ,Extinction ,Psychological ,Heroin ,Menstrual Cycle ,Progesterone ,Rats ,Wistar ,Sex Characteristics ,General Science & Technology - Abstract
The psychedelic alkaloid ibogaine has anti-addictive properties in both humans and animals1. Unlike most medications for the treatment of substance use disorders, anecdotal reports suggest that ibogaine has the potential to treat addiction to various substances, including opiates, alcohol and psychostimulants. The effects of ibogaine-like those of other psychedelic compounds-are long-lasting2, which has been attributed to its ability to modify addiction-related neural circuitry through the activation of neurotrophic factor signalling3,4. However, several safety concerns have hindered the clinical development of ibogaine, including its toxicity, hallucinogenic potential and tendency to induce cardiac arrhythmias. Here we apply the principles of function-oriented synthesis to identify the key structural elements of the potential therapeutic pharmacophore of ibogaine, and we use this information to engineer tabernanthalog-a water-soluble, non-hallucinogenic, non-toxic analogue of ibogaine that can be prepared in a single step. In rodents, tabernanthalog was found to promote structural neural plasticity, reduce alcohol- and heroin-seeking behaviour, and produce antidepressant-like effects. This work demonstrates that, through careful chemical design, it is possible to modify a psychedelic compound to produce a safer, non-hallucinogenic variant that has therapeutic potential.
- Published
- 2021
46. Social-Emotional Learning Competencies and Problematic Internet Use among Chinese Adolescents: A Structural Equation Modeling Analysis
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Chen, Chun, Yang, Chunyan, and Nie, Qian
- Subjects
Behavioral and Social Science ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Prevention ,Mind and Body ,Adolescent ,Behavior ,Addictive ,China ,Cognition ,Female ,Humans ,Internet ,Internet Use ,Latent Class Analysis ,Male ,problematic Internet use ,social emotional learning (SEL) competencies ,structural equation modeling ,Chinese adolescents ,Toxicology - Abstract
To advance the understanding about social-cognitive factors related to Chinese adolescents' experience with problematic Internet use (PIU), we examined the associations between social-emotional learning (SEL) competencies (i.e., responsible decision-making, social awareness, self-management, self-awareness, and social relationship) and problematic Internet use (PIU) among 1141 11th grade high school students from Southwest China. Through comparing the latent means of PIU across students with different demographic background (i.e., gender, social-economic status, left-behind status), the study found that male students endorsed higher levels of overall PIU and more problematic time management with Internet use than female students. No latent PIU mean differences were observed across family income and students' left-behind status. Using structural equation modeling (SEM) while controlling for demographic factors, overall SEL competencies were found to have a significantly negative association with PIU. Meanwhile, all five SEL domains were also negatively associated with students' PIU. The findings imply the importance of fostering SEL competencies in preventing PIU among Chinese adolescents. The study provides important practical implications for informing school-based SEL competencies programs for PIU prevention among Chinese youths.
- Published
- 2021
47. Caracterización del juego de azar en Galicia: Un problema de Salud Pública.
- Author
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REY-BRANDARIZ, JULIA, PÉREZ-RÍOS, MÓNICA, ISOLINA SANTIAGO-PÉREZ, MARIA, LORENZO, MARÍA, MALVAR, ALBERTO, and HERVADA, XURXO
- Abstract
Copyright of Adicciones is the property of Sociedad Cientifica Espanola de Estudios sobre el Alcohol and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
48. IMPACT OF ADDICTION TO SOCIAL NETWORKS ON THE MENTAL HEALTH OF HUMAN MEDICINE STUDENTS, IN TIMES OF COVID-19.
- Author
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Otero-Carrillo, Fiorella, Picoy-Romero, Pamela Rocio, and Espinoza-Rojas, Rubén
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MENTAL depression risk factors ,RISK assessment ,CROSS-sectional method ,POISSON distribution ,STATISTICAL models ,SOCIAL media ,SCALE analysis (Psychology) ,COMPULSIVE behavior ,MENTAL health ,CRONBACH'S alpha ,SCIENTIFIC observation ,STATISTICAL sampling ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,PARENT-child relationships ,SEX distribution ,ANXIETY ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,FAMILY relations ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,ODDS ratio ,SOCIAL networks ,PSYCHOLOGICAL stress ,RESEARCH ,STATISTICS ,PSYCHOLOGY of medical students ,SLEEP quality ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,DATA analysis software ,COVID-19 pandemic ,REGRESSION analysis - Abstract
Copyright of Revista de la Facultad de Medicina Humana is the property of Instituto de Investigaciones en Ciencias Biomedicas de la Universidad Ricardo Palma and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Mechanisms of Alcohol Addiction: Bridging Human and Animal Studies
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Kramer, John, Dick, Danielle M, King, Andrea, Ray, Lara A, Sher, Kenneth J, Vena, Ashley, Vendruscolo, Leandro F, and Acion, Laura
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Substance Misuse ,Brain Disorders ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Clinical Research ,Alcoholism ,Alcohol Use and Health ,Oral and gastrointestinal ,Good Health and Well Being ,Alcoholism ,Animals ,Behavior ,Addictive ,Craving ,Disease Models ,Animal ,Ethanol ,Humans ,Motivation ,Reinforcement ,Psychology ,Self Administration ,Neurosciences ,Public Health and Health Services ,Psychology ,Substance Abuse - Abstract
AimThe purpose of this brief narrative review is to address the complexities and benefits of extending animal alcohol addiction research to the human domain, emphasizing Allostasis and Incentive Sensitization, two models that inform many pre-clinical and clinical studies.MethodsThe work reviewed includes a range of approaches, including: a) animal and human studies that target the biology of craving and compulsive consumption; b) human investigations that utilize alcohol self-administration and alcohol challenge paradigms, in some cases across 10 years; c) questionnaires that document changes in the positive and negative reinforcing effects of alcohol with increasing severity of addiction; and d) genomic structural equation modeling based on data from animal and human studies.ResultsSeveral general themes emerge from specific study findings. First, positive reinforcement is characteristic of early stage addiction and sometimes diminishes with increasing severity, consistent with both Allostasis and Incentive Sensitization. Second, evidence is less consistent for the predominance of negative reinforcement in later stages of addiction, a key tenant of Allostasis. Finally, there are important individual differences in motivation to drink at a given point in time as well as person-specific change patterns across time.ConclusionsKey constructs of addiction, like stage and reinforcement, are by necessity operationalized differently in animal and human studies. Similarly, testing the validity of addiction models requires different strategies by the two research domains. Although such differences are challenging, they are not insurmountable, and there is much to be gained in understanding and treating addiction by combining pre-clinical and clinical approaches.
- Published
- 2020
50. Leveraging genome-wide data to investigate differences between opioid use vs. opioid dependence in 41,176 individuals from the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium
- Author
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Polimanti, Renato, Walters, Raymond K, Johnson, Emma C, McClintick, Jeanette N, Adkins, Amy E, Adkins, Daniel E, Bacanu, Silviu-Alin, Bierut, Laura J, Bigdeli, Tim B, Brown, Sandra, Bucholz, Kathleen K, Copeland, William E, Costello, E Jane, Degenhardt, Louisa, Farrer, Lindsay A, Foroud, Tatiana M, Fox, Louis, Goate, Alison M, Grucza, Richard, Hack, Laura M, Hancock, Dana B, Hartz, Sarah M, Heath, Andrew C, Hewitt, John K, Hopfer, Christian J, Johnson, Eric O, Kendler, Kenneth S, Kranzler, Henry R, Krauter, Kenneth, Lai, Dongbing, Madden, Pamela AF, Martin, Nicholas G, Maes, Hermine H, Nelson, Elliot C, Peterson, Roseann E, Porjesz, Bernice, Riley, Brien P, Saccone, Nancy, Stallings, Michael, Wall, Tamara L, Webb, Bradley T, Wetherill, Leah, Edenberg, Howard J, Agrawal, Arpana, and Gelernter, Joel
- Subjects
Biological Psychology ,Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Psychology ,Prevention ,Genetics ,Opioids ,Human Genome ,Neurosciences ,Opioid Misuse and Addiction ,Substance Misuse ,Brain Disorders ,Mental health ,Good Health and Well Being ,Analgesics ,Opioid ,Behavior ,Addictive ,Female ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Genetic Variation ,Genome ,Human ,Genome-Wide Association Study ,Genomics ,Humans ,Male ,Multifactorial Inheritance ,Opioid-Related Disorders ,Psychiatric Genomics Consortium Substance Use Disorders Workgroup ,Biological Sciences ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Psychiatry ,Clinical sciences ,Biological psychology ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
To provide insights into the biology of opioid dependence (OD) and opioid use (i.e., exposure, OE), we completed a genome-wide analysis comparing 4503 OD cases, 4173 opioid-exposed controls, and 32,500 opioid-unexposed controls, including participants of European and African descent (EUR and AFR, respectively). Among the variants identified, rs9291211 was associated with OE (exposed vs. unexposed controls; EUR z = -5.39, p = 7.2 × 10-8). This variant regulates the transcriptomic profiles of SLC30A9 and BEND4 in multiple brain tissues and was previously associated with depression, alcohol consumption, and neuroticism. A phenome-wide scan of rs9291211 in the UK Biobank (N > 360,000) found association of this variant with propensity to use dietary supplements (p = 1.68 × 10-8). With respect to the same OE phenotype in the gene-based analysis, we identified SDCCAG8 (EUR + AFR z = 4.69, p = 10-6), which was previously associated with educational attainment, risk-taking behaviors, and schizophrenia. In addition, rs201123820 showed a genome-wide significant difference between OD cases and unexposed controls (AFR z = 5.55, p = 2.9 × 10-8) and a significant association with musculoskeletal disorders in the UK Biobank (p = 4.88 × 10-7). A polygenic risk score (PRS) based on a GWAS of risk-tolerance (n = 466,571) was positively associated with OD (OD vs. unexposed controls, p = 8.1 × 10-5; OD cases vs. exposed controls, p = 0.054) and OE (exposed vs. unexposed controls, p = 3.6 × 10-5). A PRS based on a GWAS of neuroticism (n = 390,278) was positively associated with OD (OD vs. unexposed controls, p = 3.2 × 10-5; OD vs. exposed controls, p = 0.002) but not with OE (p = 0.67). Our analyses highlight the difference between dependence and exposure and the importance of considering the definition of controls in studies of addiction.
- Published
- 2020
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