Volkow Nora D, Fowler Joanna S, Wang Gene-Jack, Goldstein Rita Z
Medical Department, Brookhaven National Laboratory, Upton, New York 11973, USA.
Neurobiol Learn Mem. 2002 Nov;78(3):610-24. doi: 10.1006/nlme.2002.4099.
Drug addiction is characterized by a set of recurring processes (intoxication, withdrawal, craving) that lead to the relapsing nature of the disorder. We have used positron emission tomography to investigate in humans the role of dopamine (DA) and the brain circuits it regulates in these processes. We have shown that increases in DA are associated with the subjective reports of drug reinforcement corroborating the relevance of drug-induced DA increases in the rewarding effects of drugs in humans. During withdrawal we have shown in drug abusers significant reductions in DA D2 receptors and in DA release. We postulate that this hypodopaminergic state would result in a decreased sensitivity to natural reinforcers perpetuating the use of the drug as a means to compensate for this deficit and contributing to the anhedonia and dysphoria seen during withdrawal. Because the D2 reductions are associated with decreased activity in the anterior cingulate gyrus and in the orbitofrontal cortex we postulate that this is one of the mechanisms by which DA disruption leads to compulsive drug administration and the lack of control over drug intake in the drug-addicted individual. This is supported by studies showing that during craving these frontal regions become hyperactive in proportion to the intensity of the craving. Craving is also associated with activation of memory circuits including the amygdala (implicated in conditioned learning), hippocampus (implicated in declarative learning), and dorsal striatum (implicated in habit learning) all of which receive DA innervation. We therefore postulate that dopamine contributes to addiction by disrupting the frontal cortical circuits that regulate motivation, drive, and self-control and by memory circuits that increase the motivational salience of the drug and drug-associated stimuli.
药物成瘾的特征是一系列反复出现的过程(中毒、戒断、渴望),这些过程导致了该疾病的复发性。我们利用正电子发射断层扫描技术在人体中研究多巴胺(DA)及其调节的脑回路在这些过程中的作用。我们已经表明,多巴胺的增加与药物强化的主观报告相关,这证实了药物诱导的多巴胺增加在人类药物奖赏效应中的相关性。在戒断期间,我们发现药物滥用者的多巴胺D2受体和多巴胺释放显著减少。我们推测,这种多巴胺能低下状态会导致对自然强化物的敏感性降低,使药物的使用持续存在,以此来弥补这种缺陷,并导致戒断期间出现快感缺失和烦躁不安。由于D2受体的减少与前扣带回和眶额皮质的活动减少有关,我们推测这是多巴胺紊乱导致成瘾个体强迫性用药和无法控制药物摄入的机制之一。这得到了一些研究的支持,这些研究表明,在渴望期间,这些额叶区域会随着渴望强度的增加而变得过度活跃。渴望还与包括杏仁核(与条件学习有关)、海马体(与陈述性学习有关)和背侧纹状体(与习惯学习有关)在内的记忆回路的激活有关,所有这些区域都接受多巴胺的神经支配。因此,我们推测多巴胺通过破坏调节动机、驱动力和自我控制的额叶皮质回路以及增加药物和与药物相关刺激的动机显著性的记忆回路来导致成瘾。