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Psychobiology of Addiction

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Psychobiology of Addiction. LECTURE 16. Mechanisms of tolerance. Dai Stephens. See also ... inhibitory activity of GABA under benzodiazepines (Stephens, 1995) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Psychobiology of Addiction


1
Psychobiology of Addiction
  • LECTURE 16
  •  
  • Mechanisms of tolerance
  • Dai Stephens
  • See also
  • http//www.acnp.org/g4/GN401000070/CH070.html

2
Different Forms of Tolerance
  • Dispositional or Pharmacokinetic Tolerance
  • Due to changes in the rate at which the drug is
    metabolised so that drug concentrations at the
    site of action are reduced
  • Pharmacodynamic Tolerance
  • Due to adaptive changes within affected systems,
    so that the response is reduced in the presence
    of the drug
  • Tachyphylaxis acute tolerance which occurs
    within a short (up to say, 2h) time following
    drug exposure.
  • Behavioural Tolerance
  • If the drug has a behavioural effect, especially
    if this leads to loss of reward, or increase in
    punishment, (i.e. has a high cost to the animal)
    then tolerance can develop very quickly as a
    result of behavioural adaptation.

3
Storage Depots
Bone and Fat Free Bound
Target Site
Neuronal Receptor
Intestines, kidneys, lungs, sweat glands, etc
Absorbing tissue
Plasma protein Free bound
Absorbs metabolites from bloodstream Kidneys
clear some drugs from bloodstream
Membranes of oral cavity, GI tract, peritoneum,
skin, muscles, lungs
Metabolites
Drug Administration
Gall Bladder
Liver
Oral, intravenous, intraperitoneal, subcutaneous,
intramuscular, inhalation
Excretion
Biotransformation (drug metabolism)
Drug metabolites excreted with bile
Faeces, urine, water vapour, sweat, saliva
4
Pharmacokinetic tolerance
  •         Alcohol is metabolised by liver enzymes,
    including alcohol dehydrogenase. Even low alcohol
    levels saturate the enzyme, so that the rate of
    metabolism is largely independent of the amount
    of alcohol absorbed.
  •         Following chronic alcohol use there is
    evidence for an adaptation of the enzyme to make
    it more efficient in metabolising ethanol.
  •         Some individuals predisposed to
    alcoholism, metabolise alcohol at a faster rate
    than others. This allows them to take in higher
    quantities of alcohol before becoming
    intoxicated. People of Asian origin are more
    likely to succomb quickly to the effects of
    alcohol because they lack an enzyme which breaks
    down alcohol into carbon dioxide and water.
  •         In the case of barbiturates, the enzyme
    which metabolises the drug in the liver is
    induced by the drug, leading to more rapid
    metabolism.

5
Pharmacokinetic tolerance
  •        Rat pups born to mothers morphine-treated
    weeks before impregnation, show reduced effects
    of morphine. Possibly due to the mothers
    developing antibodies to morphine (or
    morphine/protein complexes) which entered the
    offspring after conception.
  •         Acutely, morphine reduces blood flow.
    Following chronic treatment, this effect
    disappears, so that blood flow is normal.
    Impaired blood flow leads to reduced clearance of
    drug from the bloodstream by the liver and
    kidneys, higher plasma concentrations, and higher
    brain concentrations.
  •         NB Under pharmacokinetic tolerance, all
    effects of the drug will be diminished.

6
Pharmacodynamic tolerance
  • Tachyphylaxis
  •         Many drugs show a decline in their
    effects following administration, even though
    plasma and brain levels are increasing.
  • Acute Functional Tolerance 

7
Pharmacodynamic tolerance
  • Physiological adaptation
  • Decremental and Oppositional forms of tolerance
    (within system, and between system tolerance)
  • Decremental
  • Opioid peptides in human cerebrospinal fluid in 3
    heroin addict groups compared to healthy
    volunteers
  • (OBrien et al, Biol Psychiatr. 1988)

Opiates are known to act on locus coeruleus cAMP
systems to inhibit adenylyl cyclase. Opiate
tolerance is associated with upregulation of
cAMP.
8
Pharmacodynamic tolerance
  • Oppositional
  • Tolerance to benzodiazepines does not appear to
    be associated with changes in numbers of GABAA
    receptors, but may reflect increased activity in
    glutamatergic transmission which compensates for
    the increased inhibitory activity of GABA under
    benzodiazepines (Stephens, 1995).

9
Adaptation to alcohol
10
Behavioural toleranceChen (1968)
Psychopharmacology 12 433
  • Design
  • Train rats to perform maze to obtain spaghetti
    reward.
  • Following stable performance, rats given blocks
    of trials in maze on successive days
  • Trial 1 injected with saline
  • Trial 2 injected with alcohol (1.2 g/kg)
  • Trial 3 no injection
  • Trial 4 injected with saline.
  • Each animal received a further injection of
    saline 10 mins before entry to maze.
  • Two groups
  • Behavioural Group alcohol given 10 min before
    rat placed in apparatus.
  • Physiological Group alcohol given after trial.
  •  4 blocks of trials

11
Behavioural toleranceChen (1968)
Psychopharmacology 12 433
No. Errors
Total trials
No. Correct trials
 
 Behavioural group
Control
30.1
2.5
33.5
0.5
6
8
1st EtOH
26
10
34
4th EtOH
  Physiological group
12
Behavioural tolerance Instrumental
ConditioningCampbell Seiden PBB 1 703 (1973)
  • Train rats on DRL schedule, then treat them with
    amphetamine, either immediately before DRL
    session, or after it.
  • Amphetamine disrupts DRL performance because the
    animals overrespond. With repeated experience of
    amphetamine given immediately before the session,
    the animals develop tolerance, and show
    unimpaired DRL performance.
  • If those rats which received amphetamine after
    the DRL sessions on the same number of occasions
    were now given it immediately before the session,
    DRL performance was disrupted.
  • Cannot be due to pharmacokinteic or
    pharmacodynamic tolerance the before group must
    have learned how to compensate for the
    amphetamine in order to obtain maximum reward.

13
Behavioural tolerance Instrumental
ConditioningSchuster (1966)
  • Used a schedule with two components, FI and DRL,
    to study amphetamine effects.
  • In two rats, tolerance developed to the stimulant
    effects of amphetamine in the DRL component, but
    not in the FI component in which high rates of
    responding had no effect on the numbers of
    reinforcers obtained.
  • Since both components were running at the same
    time, tolerance attributable to pharmacodynamic
    or pharmacokinertic explanations can be ruled
    out some form of learning is occurring.

14
Behavioural tolerance Instrumental
ConditioningVogel-Sprott (1981)
  • Gave male volunteers treated with alcohol a
    pursuit rotor task. One group, was rewarded with
    money for exceeding their baseline accuracy.
    These subjects developed tolerance, whereas a
    group which did not receive reward showed no
    tolerance.
  • Some evidence from the same group that simply
    mentally rehearsing the pursuit rotor task under
    drug gave rise to tolerance

15
Behavioural tolerance Classical Conditioning
  • Some idiosyncrasies of drug-related classical
    conditioning 
  • Normally expect that the drug acts as an
    unconditional stimulus (UCS), that elicits
    unconditional responses (UCR). The UCS will be
    paired with environmental stimuli which may
    become drug-predictive stimuli (CS), which if
    presented alone will elicit conditional responses
    (CRs) which should resemble drug UCRs.
  • In many cases, the CS elicits an opposite effect
    to the drug UCS.
  • Siegel proposes that tolerance develops when a
    drug UCS elicits two responses its own UCR, and
    a compensatory response which counteracts the
    drug effect. Over repeated treatments,
    environmental stimuli become associated with the
    compensatory response, so that they elicit a CR
    which acts to oppose the effect of the drug.

16
Behavioural tolerance Classical Conditioning
  • If compensatory CRs mediate tolerance, classical
    conditioning theory predictstolerance will be
    situationally specific.
  •  
  • Case of NE who administered his father morphine
    4x daily for pain control, under the direction of
    a physician. Administration normally occurred
    in bedroom, which was kept dimly lit, and
    contained hospital equipment for the fathers
    treatment. 
  • On day in question, the morphine was administered
    in the living room, which was brightly lit, and
    differed in many ways from the sickroom. Reaction
    to drug was particularly severe, and despite
    medical attention the patient died some hours
    later.
  • More formal experiments in animals have
    demonstrated situational-specific tolerance for
    opiates, barbiturates, ethanol, nicotine,
    benzodiazepines, using temperature regulation,
    pain, drinking, motor activity, etc as measures.

17
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18
Behavioural tolerance Classical Conditioning
  • More formal experiments in animals have
    demonstrated situational-specific tolerance for
    opiates, barbiturates, ethanol, nicotine,
    benzodiazepines, using temperature regulation,
    pain, drinking, motor activity, etc as measures.
  •  

19
Tests of conditioned tolerance
  • Presentations of the CS in the absence of the
    drug UCS will reveal the opponent process
  •  
  • Situationally-specific withdrawal can be elicited
    by cues repeatedly associated with drug
    administration
  •  
  • 2. Tolerance should be extinguished by
    repeated presentation of CS in absence of drug
    UCS
  • Tolerance to morphines analgesic effects can be
    reversed by repeated exposure to the hotplate and
    placebo injections (Siegel JCPP 89 498, 1975)

20
Conditioned opponent process theory
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