Koob George F
Department of Neuropharmacology, The Scripps Research Institute, La Jolla, California 92037, USA.
Alcohol Clin Exp Res. 2003 Feb;27(2):232-43. doi: 10.1097/01.ALC.0000057122.36127.C2.
Alcoholism is a chronic relapsing disorder characterized by compulsive drinking, loss of control over intake, and impaired social and occupational function. Animal models have been developed for various stages of the alcohol addiction cycle with a focus on the motivational effects of withdrawal, craving, and protracted abstinence. A conceptual framework focused on allostatic changes in reward function that lead to excessive drinking provides a heuristic framework with which to identify the neurobiologic mechanisms involved in the development of alcoholism. Neuropharmacologic studies in animal models have provided evidence for specific neurochemical mechanisms in specific brain reward and stress circuits that become dysregulated during the development of alcohol dependence. The brain reward system implicated in the development of alcoholism comprises key elements of a basal forebrain macrostructure termed the extended amygdala that includes the central nucleus of the amygdala, the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis, and a transition zone in the medial (shell) part of the nucleus accumbens. There are multiple neurotransmitter systems that converge on the extended amygdala that become dysregulated during the development of alcohol dependence, including gamma-aminobutyric acid, opioid peptides, glutamate, serotonin, and dopamine. In addition, the brain stress systems may contribute significantly to the allostatic state. During the development of alcohol dependence, corticotropin-releasing factor may be recruited, and the neuropeptide Y brain antistress system may be compromised. These changes in the reward and stress systems are hypothesized to maintain hedonic stability in an allostatic state, as opposed to a homeostatic state, and as such convey the vulnerability for relapse in recovering alcoholics. The allostatic model not only integrates molecular, cellular, and circuitry neuroadaptations in brain motivational systems produced by chronic alcohol ingestion with genetic vulnerability but also provides a key to translate advances in animal studies to the human condition.
酒精中毒是一种慢性复发性疾病,其特征为强迫性饮酒、无法控制饮酒量以及社会和职业功能受损。针对酒精成瘾周期的各个阶段已开发出动物模型,重点关注戒断、渴望和长期戒酒的动机效应。一个关注奖励功能的非稳态变化导致过度饮酒的概念框架,为识别酒精中毒发展过程中涉及的神经生物学机制提供了一个启发式框架。动物模型中的神经药理学研究为特定脑奖励和应激回路中的特定神经化学机制提供了证据,这些机制在酒精依赖发展过程中会失调。与酒精中毒发展相关的脑奖励系统包括一个称为扩展杏仁核的基底前脑宏观结构的关键要素,其中包括杏仁核的中央核、终纹床核以及伏隔核内侧(壳)部分的一个过渡区。在酒精依赖发展过程中,有多个神经递质系统汇聚于扩展杏仁核并失调,包括γ-氨基丁酸、阿片肽、谷氨酸、血清素和多巴胺。此外,脑应激系统可能对非稳态状态有显著贡献。在酒精依赖发展过程中,促肾上腺皮质激素释放因子可能会被激活,而神经肽Y脑抗应激系统可能会受到损害。奖励和应激系统的这些变化被认为是在非稳态而非稳态状态下维持享乐稳定性,因此表明戒酒者有复发的易感性。非稳态模型不仅整合了慢性酒精摄入在脑动机系统中产生的分子、细胞和回路神经适应性变化与遗传易感性,还为将动物研究的进展转化为人类情况提供了关键。