Brain may never fully recover from cocaine addiction

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Press Trust of India Washington
Last Updated : Sep 24 2013 | 1:21 PM IST
Brain may never fully recover from the effects of cocaine addiction, even after long-term abstinence from the substance, scientists, including one of Indian-origin, have found.
Researchers have found that even long-term abstinence from cocaine does not result in a complete normalisation of brain circuitry.
Scientists are currently trying to answer some of the questions surrounding the abuse of drugs.
One of those questions is whether individuals who abuse psychostimulants like cocaine are more impulsive and show alterations in brain reward circuits as a consequence of using the drug, or whether such abnormalities existed prior to their drug use.
In the former case, one might expect brain alterations to normalise following prolonged drug abstinence.
To address these questions, Krishna Patel at Institute of Living/Hartford Hospital and colleagues compared neural responses between three groups of people who were asked to complete a task that resembles bidding on eBay items.
The three groups consisted of 47 healthy controls, 42 currently drug-abusing cocaine users, and 35 former cocaine users who had been abstinent an average of 4 years. They also compared all three groups on their levels of impulsivity and reward responding.
They found that active users showed abnormal activation in multiple brain regions involved with reward processing, and that the abstinent individuals who were previously cocaine dependent manifested differences in a subset of those regions.
Both current and former cocaine users displayed similarly elevated impulsivity measures compared to healthy controls, which may indicate that these individuals had a pre-existing risk for addiction.
Indeed, the degree of impulsivity correlated with several of the brain activation abnormalities.
These findings suggest that prolonged abstinence from cocaine may normalise only a subset of the brain abnormalities associated with active drug use, according to the study published in the journal Biological Psychiatry.
"The knowledge that some neural changes associated with addiction persist despite long periods of abstinence is important because it supports clinical wisdom that recovery from addiction is a lifelong process," said Dr John Krystal, Editor of Biological Psychiatry.
"Further, it is the start of a deeper question: How do these persisting changes develop and how can they be reversed?" he said.
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First Published: Sep 24 2013 | 1:21 PM IST

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