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The Role of Dopamine in the Addicted Human Brain

The Role of Dopamine in the Addicted Human Brain

Overview

Chemicals that activate the reward system are reinforcing to a wide variety of species from reptiles to humans. Their physiological activation of brain reward systems is believed to be the starting point for the neurobiological changes that launch the addiction trajectory. Research on addiction has started to uncover the sequence of events and long-lasting sequelae that can result from the persistent abuse of addictive substances. These studies have shown how repeated drug use can target key molecules (both common and specific for various drug types) and brain circuits, and eventually disrupt the higher order processes that underlie emotions, cognition, and behavior, and enable an individual to exert self-control. Specifically, preclinical and clinical brain imaging studies have shown that addiction is characterized by an expanding cycle of dysfunction in the brain. The impairment appears to start in the more evolutionarily primitive areas that process reward, but then moves on to other brain regions that are responsible for more complex cognitive functions. Thus, in addition to reward, addicted individuals can experience severe disruptions in learning (memory, conditioning, habituation), executive function (impulse inhibition, decision making, delayed gratification, judgment), cognitive awareness (interoception), and emotional response (mood and stress reactivity). The combined, cumulative impact of addiction on all these circuits results in poor decision making in addicted individuals despite awareness of negative consequences, and the inability to delay gratification despite future losses. Scientific advances in this area are informing strategies for medication development to help buffer the brain dysfunction associated with chronic drug exposure and addiction.

  • Dialogue 27
    11 sessions
  • October 30, 2013
    Dharamsala, Himachal Pradesh, India
  • Session Audio
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Speakers

His Holiness The Dalai Lama

Tenzin Gyatso, the14th Dalai Lama, is the leader of Tibetan Buddhism and a spiritual leader revered worldwide. He was born on July 6, 1935, in a small village called Taktser in northeastern Tibet. Born to a peasant family, he was recognized at the age of two, in accordance with Tibetan tradition, as the reincarnation of his predecessor, the 13th Dalai Lama. The Dalai Lamas are manifestations of the Buddha of Compassion, who choose to reincarnate for the purpose of serving human beings. Winner of the Nobel Prize for Peace in 1989, he is universally respected as a spokesman for the compassionate and peaceful resolution of human conflict. He has traveled extensively, speaking on subjects including universal responsibility, love, compassion and kindness. Less well known is his intense personal interest in the sciences; he has said that if he were not a monk, he would have liked to be an engineer. As a youth in Lhasa it was he who was called on to fix broken machinery in the Potala Palace, be it a clock or a car. He has a vigorous interest in learning the newest developments in science, and brings to bear both a voice for the humanistic implications of the findings, and a high degree of intuitive methodological sophistication.

Nora Volkow

Nora Volkow, MD, is the Director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse at the National Institutes of Health, one of the world's foremost medical research centers. She pioneered the use of brain imaging to investigate the effects of drugs in the human brain and has demonstrated that drug addiction is a brain disease. She has published more than 600 scientific articles and edited three books. She has received multiple awards, including membership in the Institute of Medicine, selection as one of Time Magazine's "Top 100 People Who Shape our World", inclusion as “One of the 20 People to Watch” by Newsweek magazine, and selection as "Innovator of the Year" by US News & World Report.