
New Service for
TodaysSeniorsNetwork.com readers...roll mouse over, click on
highlighted links in stories to review items from Amazon
Mental illness and drug addiction may
co-occur due to disturbance in the brain’s
seat of anxiety and fear
Newswise — Why do
mental illness and drug addiction so often
go together? New research reveals that this
type of dual diagnosis may stem from a
common cause: developmental changes in the amygdala, a walnut-shaped part of the brain
linked to fear, anxiety and other emotions.
A full report on why these “comorbid”
disorders may develop appears in the
December Behavioral Neuroscience, published
by the American Psychological Association (APA).
Dual diagnosis is
common yet difficult to treat. Addiction of
all types – to nicotine, alcohol and drugs –
is often found in people with a wide variety
of mental illnesses, including anxiety
disorders, unipolar and bipolar depression,
schizophrenia, and borderline and other
personality disorders. Lead author Andrew
Chambers, MD, cites clinical reports that at
least half the people who seek help with
addiction or mental-health treatment have
co-occurring disorders.
Epidemiological data
says that from two to five of every 10
anxious or depressed people, and from four
to eight of every 10 people with
schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, or
antisocial personality, also have some type
of addiction.
To find the scientific
basis for this complex, seemingly
intractable pairing, which has in the past
been attributed to “self-medication,”
Chambers’ team at the Indiana University
medical school compared the adult mood- and
drug-related behavior of two groups of adult
rats: those whose amygdalas were surgically
damaged in infancy and those whose amygdalas
were left intact but who underwent a sham
surgery, to equalize their treatment.
Rats with damaged (lesioned)
amygdalas grew up abnormally
under-responsive to ambiguous or potentially
threatening stimuli. Not showing the normal
caution, they moved significantly more in
response to novelty, showed significantly
less fear in an elevated maze, and kept
socializing even when exposed to the scent
of a predator.
Crucially, these same
rats also were significantly more sensitive
to cocaine after just one exposure. And rats
given repeated cocaine injections later
showed even stronger expressions of the
enduring changes in behavior – suggesting an
overall hypersensitivity to the addictive
process.
Given that the
experimental and control rats were raised in
the same tightly controlled conditions, the
only difference being their brain status,
researchers concluded that the integrity of
the amygdala was the root cause of both
impaired fear behavior and heightened drug
response.
“Brain conditions may
alter addiction vulnerability independently
of drug history,” says Chambers. He and his
colleagues concluded that someone’s greater
vulnerability to addiction, rather than a
given drug’s ability to alter the symptoms
of mental illness for better or worse
(usually worse), more fully explains the
high rates of dual diagnosis.
For these reasons, and
given the lab evidence and the fact that
dual diagnosis patients do less well on
psychiatric medication than other patients,
Chambers wondered whether the underlying
problems in the brain – what he calls
“neural inflexibility” -- make it harder for
these people to respond.
To improve the
effectiveness of treatments for dual
diagnosis, Chambers would like to see
educators, counselors, physicians, and
scientific researchers integrate insights
into both mental health and addiction.
Funding the simultaneous treatment of both
disorders would also help, he observes,
given that “dual-diagnosis cases are the
mainstream among these patients, probably
because addiction and mental illness are
strongly linked by neurobiology.”
What may harm the
amygdala early in human development? Dr.
Chambers cites the relatively rare cases of
temporal lobe epilepsy, tumors or early
brain injury. Far more common, he
speculates, are complex interactions among
subtle genetic and environmental factors
that change the way the amygdala functions
or is connected to the rest of the brain
during childhood and adolescence. For
example, he says, “Early emotional trauma,
paired with a certain genetic background,
may alter the early development of neural
networks intrinsic to the amygdala,
resulting in a cascade of brain effects and
functional changes that present in adulthood
as a dual-diagnosis disorder.”
Article: “Neonatal
Amygdala Lesions: Co-Occurring Impact on
Social/Fear-Related Behavior and Cocaine
Sensitization in Adult Rats,” R. Andrew
Chambers, MD, Tammy J. Sajdyk, PhD, Susan K.
Conroy, BS Joan E. Lafuze, PhD, Stephanie D.
Fitz, BS, and Anantha Shekhar, MD, PhD;
Laboratory for Translational Neuroscience of
Dual Diagnosis and Development, Institute of
Psychiatric Research, Department of
Psychiatry, Indiana University School of
Medicine; Behavioral Neuroscience, Vol 121,
No. 6.
(Full text of the
article is available from the APA Public
Affairs Office and at
http://www.apa.org/journals/releases/bne12161316.pdf
)
The American Psychological Association (APA),
in Washington, DC, is the largest scientific
and professional organization representing
psychology in the United States and is the
world’s largest association of
psychologists. APA’s membership includes
more than 148,000 researchers, educators,
clinicians, consultants and students.
Through its divisions in 54 subfields of
psychology and affiliations with 60 state,
territorial and Canadian provincial
associations, APA works to advance
psychology as a science, as a profession and
as a means of promoting human welfare.
...
...
...