NIDA Publishes Study on Cocaine Use
Below for your information is a link to a news release from the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)/NIH regarding a new study that finds persistent brain changes in response to cocaine depend on the expectation of the reward.
Drug addiction dramatically shifts a person's attention, priorities,
and behaviors towards a focus almost entirely on seeking out and taking
drugs. Now, an animal study funded by the National Institute on Drug
Abuse, part of the National Institutes of Health, has identified some
of the specific long-term adaptations in the brain's reward system that
may contribute to this shift. These long-lasting brain changes may
underlie the maladaptive learning that contributes to addiction and to
the propensity for relapse, even after years of abstinence from the
drug. The study was published in Neuron on July 30, 2008.
Read the full article on the NIDA
website.