Fattore Liana, Fadda Paola, Antinori Silvia, Fratta Walter
CNR National Research Council of Italy, Institute of Neuroscience-Cagliari, Cagliari, Italy.
Methods Mol Biol. 2015;1230:281-93. doi: 10.1007/978-1-4939-1708-2_24.
Opioid abuse in humans is characterized by discontinuous periods of drug use and abstinence. With time, the probability of falling into renewed drug consumption becomes particularly high and constitutes a considerable problem in the management of heroin addicts. The major problem in the treatment of opioid dependence still remains the occurrence of relapse, to which stressful life events, renewed use of heroin, and exposure to drug-associated environmental cues are all positively correlated. To study the neurobiology of relapse, many research groups currently use the reinstatement animal model, which greatly contributed to disentangle the mechanisms underlying relapse to drug-seeking in laboratory animals. The use of this model is becoming increasingly popular worldwide, and new versions have been recently developed to better appreciate the differential contribution of each opioid receptor subtype to the relapse phenomenon. In this chapter we review the state of the art of our knowledge on the specific role of the opioid receptors as unrevealed by the reinstatement animal model of opioid-seeking behavior.
人类阿片类药物滥用的特点是药物使用和戒断期不连续。随着时间的推移,重新陷入药物消费的可能性变得特别高,这在海洛因成瘾者的管理中构成了一个相当大的问题。阿片类药物依赖治疗中的主要问题仍然是复发的发生,压力性生活事件、再次使用海洛因以及接触与药物相关的环境线索都与复发呈正相关。为了研究复发的神经生物学,许多研究小组目前使用重新恢复动物模型,这极大地有助于理清实验室动物中寻求药物复发的潜在机制。该模型的使用在全球范围内越来越普遍,最近还开发了新版本,以更好地了解每种阿片受体亚型对复发现象的不同贡献。在本章中,我们回顾了通过阿片类药物寻求行为的重新恢复动物模型所揭示的关于阿片受体特定作用的现有知识状态。