Sections
Neurobiology of Substance Abuse and Addiction: Introduction | The Drug Addiction Process | Neuroscientific Approaches to the Drug Addiction
Process | The Acquisition of Addiction | Relapse to Drug-Seeking and Drug Use Behaviors | Neural Substrates Underlying the Association of Drug
Addiction With Impulsive Aggression and Violence | Drug Addiction Treatment Outcome | Future Directions | References
Excerpt
Drug addiction is characterized by pathological
motivation for drug-seeking and -use behaviors associated with the
inability to inhibit such behaviors in spite of their clear adverse
consequences (Kalivas and Volkow 2005). These features
are clinically operationalized as a diagnosis of drug dependence
based on an individual's fulfilling at least three of seven
criteria defined by DSM-IV-TR (American Psychiatric Association 2000). The authors conform to the position (O'Brien et al. 2006) that drug addiction rather
than dependence is more appropriate
in referring to this maladaptive behavioral disorder and refer to drug
dependence only when referring to clinical populations defined by
DSM-IV-TR criteria. Drug addiction represents a major public health
concern due to its high population prevalence, associated suffering
and disability, and limited efficacy of extant therapies to promote
recovery and relapse prevention. Understanding the underlying neurobiology
of drug abuse and addiction offers the best promise to control drug
addiction by identifying the bases of risk for addiction and targeting
intervention strategies, uncoupling relapse from its precipitants,
and minimizing the personal and social burden of addiction. This
chapter represents a critical review of the current state of this
understanding and a synthesis of knowledge into present and future
directives for managing drug abuse and addiction. The treatment
here of this topic is not meant to be comprehensive, but rather
focuses on the authors' prioritization of those scientific
areas of discovery that are perceived to be most relevant to curbing
drug addiction. Attempts have been made to direct interested readers
to more exhaustive treatments of less prioritized areas of addiction
research findings.