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Craving

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c2004 Alcohol Medical Scholars Program. 4. DSM-IV Dependence. 3 or more of the following: ... c2004 Alcohol Medical Scholars Program. 20 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Craving


1
Craving
  • Karen Drexler, M.D.
  • Emory University School of Medicine

2
Overview
  • What is craving?
  • Why is it so compelling?
  • What are the neural mechanisms that drive
    craving?
  • How does knowing neurobiology inform my clinical
    practice?

3
Features
  • Intense desire
  • Many components
  • 3 types
  • Withdrawal-induced
  • Drug-induced
  • Cue-induced
  • Compels drug-seeking in dependent individuals

4
DSM-IV Dependence
  • 3 or more of the following
  • Tolerance
  • Withdrawal
  • Larger amounts than intended
  • Persistent efforts to cut down or control
  • A great deal of time spent getting the substance,
    taking it, or recovering
  • Important activities given up
  • Continued use despite psychological or physical
    problem exacerbated by use

5
Desire Corresponds With Drug Use
Liking
Wanting
Craving
Non-problematic use
Abuse
Dep
6
Overview
  • What is craving?
  • Why is it so compelling?

7
Why is Craving So Compelling?
  • Correlates with other measures of substance
    dependence
  • Better understanding may lead to better treatment

8
Overview
  • What is craving?
  • Why is it so compelling?
  • What are the neural mechanisms that drive craving?

9
Neural Mechanisms
10
Mesocorticolimbic Pathway
Anterior cingulate
Subcallosal cortex
Nucleus accumbens
Ventral tegmental area
11
Prefrontal - Limbic Inhibition
Dorsolateral PFC
Lateral Orbitofrontal cortex
Nucleus accumbens
12
Amygdala Limbic Connections
Medial PFC
Nucleus accumbens
Amygdala
13
Neural Mechanisms
14
Neuroimaging in Humans
  • Confirm these hypotheses
  • Two types of provocation
  • Drug-induced
  • Cue-induced

15
Drug-induced Craving
High
Craving
16
Drug-induced Craving
17
Cue-induced Craving
  • Widely distributed cortical activations
  • Temporal lobe (Amygdala)
  • Frontal cortex (DLPFC, OFC)
  • Less often mesolimbic pathway

18
Cue-induced Craving
19
Cue-induced Craving Associated ? in BOLD fMRI
Dorsolateral Prefrontal
Ant Cingulate
Medial Prefrontal
Post Cingulate
Garavan et al, 2000
20
Amygdala Activation to Ethanol Cues Before and
After Treatment
Amygdala
Before treatment
After treatment
Schneider et al, 2001
21
Neural Correlates of Cocaine Cue-induced Craving
Left
Right
insula
-34 mm
34 mm
anterior cingulate
amygdala
-19 mm
19 mm
-9 mm
9 mm
subcallosal cortex
nucleus accumbens area
22
Drug-induced vs Cue-induced Craving
23
Overview
  • What is craving?
  • Why is it so compelling?
  • What are the neural mechanisms associated with
    craving?
  • How does this affect my clinical practice?

24
Implications for Treatment
  • Appreciation that substance dependence is a brain
    disease
  • Cognitive behavioral therapy
  • Medications

25
Craving Summary
  • Intense desire that compels use in dependent
    individuals
  • Associated neural circuits involved in
  • Reward
  • Cognitive control
  • Learning
  • Treatment targeting craving may improve outcome
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