Division of Clinical Neuroscience and Behavioral Research, National Institute on Drug Abuse, Rockville, Maryland, USA.
Ann N Y Acad Sci. 2010 Feb;1187:294-315. doi: 10.1111/j.1749-6632.2009.05420.x.
For more than half a century, since the beginning of formal diagnostics, our psychiatric nosology has compartmentalized the compulsive pursuit of substance (e.g., alcohol, cocaine, heroin, nicotine) from nonsubstance (e.g., gambling, food, sex) rewards. Emerging brain, behavioral, and genetic findings challenge this diagnostic boundary, pointing to shared vulnerabilities underlying the pathological pursuit of substance and nonsubstance rewards. Working groups for the fifth revision of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, fifth edition (DSM-V), are thus considering whether the nosologic boundaries of addiction should be redrawn to include nonsubstance disorders, such as gambling. This review discusses how neurobiological data from problem gambling, obesity, and "normal" states of attachment (romantic infatuation, sexual attraction, maternal bonds) may help us in the task of carving addictions "at a new joint." Diagnostic recarving may have a positive effect on addiction research, stimulating discovery of "crossover" pharmacotherapies with benefit for both substance and nonsubstance addictions.
半个多世纪以来,从正式诊断开始,我们的精神病学分类学就将对物质(例如酒精、可卡因、海洛因、尼古丁)的强迫性追求与非物质(例如赌博、食物、性)的奖励区分开来。新兴的大脑、行为和遗传研究结果对这一诊断界限提出了挑战,指出了物质和非物质奖励的病理性追求背后存在共同的脆弱性。因此,第五版《精神疾病诊断与统计手册》(DSM-V)的修订工作组正在考虑是否应重新绘制成瘾的分类界限,将赌博等非物质障碍包括在内。这篇综述讨论了来自赌博问题、肥胖和“正常”依恋状态(浪漫迷恋、性吸引、母子纽带)的神经生物学数据如何帮助我们在“新关节”处对成瘾进行分类。重新诊断可能会对成瘾研究产生积极影响,激发发现对物质和非物质成瘾都有益的“交叉”药物治疗方法。