Smith Mark A, Lynch Wendy J
Department of Psychology and Program in Neuroscience, Davidson College Davidson, NC, USA.
Front Psychiatry. 2012 Jan 12;2:82. doi: 10.3389/fpsyt.2011.00082. eCollection 2011.
Epidemiological studies reveal that individuals who engage in regular aerobic exercise are less likely to use and abuse illicit drugs. Until recently, very few studies had examined the causal influences that mediate this relationship, and it was not clear whether exercise was effective at reducing substance use and abuse. In the past few years, several preclinical studies have revealed that exercise reduces drug self-administration in laboratory animals. These studies have revealed that exercise produces protective effects in procedures designed to model different transitional phases that occur during the development of, and recover from, a substance use disorder (e.g., acquisition, maintenance, escalation, and relapse/reinstatement of drug use). Moreover, recent studies have revealed several behavioral and neurobiological consequences of exercise that may be responsible for its protective effects in these assays. Collectively, these studies have provided convincing evidence to support the development of exercise-based interventions to reduce compulsive patterns of drug intake in clinical and at-risk populations.
流行病学研究表明,经常进行有氧运动的个体使用和滥用非法药物的可能性较小。直到最近,很少有研究探讨介导这种关系的因果影响,也不清楚运动是否能有效减少药物使用和滥用。在过去几年中,几项临床前研究表明,运动可减少实验动物的药物自我给药。这些研究表明,在旨在模拟物质使用障碍发展和恢复过程中出现的不同过渡阶段(例如药物使用的获取、维持、升级和复发/复吸)的程序中,运动产生了保护作用。此外,最近的研究揭示了运动的几种行为和神经生物学后果,这些后果可能是其在这些试验中产生保护作用的原因。总体而言,这些研究提供了令人信服的证据,支持开展基于运动的干预措施,以减少临床和高危人群中强迫性药物摄入模式。