Scientists know that addictive drugs can mess with the brain's
circuitry and hijack its reward systems, but a new rat study shows that
psychological factors may be more instrumental in causing these changes
than a drug's chemical effects are. Cocaine use triggers
long-lasting cellular memories in the brain, the study found-but only if
the user consumes the drug voluntarily.

A team led by Billy Chen and Antonello Bonci, both at the University of
California, San Francisco, trained three groups of rats to press levers
that delivered cocaine, food or sugar. The researchers injected cocaine
into a fourth group. When they examined the rats` brain tissue, they
found an increase in synaptic strength within the reward center in those
rats that had self-administered sugar, food or cocaine. These cellular
memories were short-lived in the sugar and food groups, but in rats that
had self-administered cocaine they persisted for up to three months
after consumption had stopped. Most interestingly, the brains of rats
that had consumed cocaine involuntarily did not show such imprints.

The findings illustrate that the pharmacological effects of cocaine
alone are not enough to create reward-associated memories, Bonci says
"Instead the motivation for taking the drug seems to be a key
component in the process as well."

The team is working to find way to remove the long-term cellular memory
left b voluntary cocaine use, which eventually could help treat
addiction in humans by taking away the desire to actively seek the drug,
Chen says.


Happy Learning,

Yovan P. Putra

www.primastudy.com <http://www.primastudy.com>











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