Friday, December 15, 2006

Outstanding addiction videocast by Nora Volkow, NIDA director

Many addiction treatment programs and texts feature presentations that attempt to explain addiction with reference to brain structures and chemicals that act as neurotransmitters. I have never heard or read a presentation as able and thorough as the lecture given to physicians Dec. 13 by Nora D. Volkow, M.D., Director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) as part of a Great Teachers series, available as streaming video.

With the tantalizing title, Drug Addiction: Neurobiology of Disrupted Free Will, Volkow tackles head-on one of the central paradoxes of addiction, namely that addiction is a behavior, hence theoretically subject to our free will, and yet it is a behavior which we feel compelled to choose even when we take no pleasure in it and do not want to do it.

Volkow's video lecture runs just over one hour, and if you have any intellectual curiosity about this issue you owe it to yourself to take the time and view it in its entirety. During the first 45 minutes, Volkow reviews territory that will feel familiar to anyone who paid attention to brain research during the 1990s, namely the interplay between addiction and certain receptors for dopamine, notably the low number of D2 receptors in the brains of addicted persons-- processes that occur mainly in the limbic system of the mid-brain. The gist of this is that addicted persons have a reduced anatomical ability to take pleasure from substances that normally provide it.

Then at about minute 48, she launches into the cutting-edge new stuff: research that shows the unmistakable footprint of addiction in the so-called "higher" brain, the forebrain structures where we do our abstract reasoning. The anterior cingulate cortex has the role of interpreting the meaning of external stimuli; it is the spin doctor. In persons who are addicted, this structure is damaged; it has lost its plasticity and can no longer play its normal role of inhibiting urges coming from the limbic system. What emerges from Volkow's lecture is a much more complex, nuanced, and interesting picture of the addicted brain than could have been constructed on the basis of research done ten years ago.

Among the notable points that remained with me:
  • Central to the definition of addiction, in Volkow's view, is the fact that addicted persons both want and do not want to use the drug. Volkow is the first prominent researcher to my knowledge to grasp the fact, well known to numerous clinical workers and to addicts themselves, that addicts are internally conflicted about their addiction. The popular notion that addicts are "in denial" about their addiction (that they only want to use and do not also have a conscious contrary volition) is at best a half-truth. Volkow shows with imaging studies why the internal conflict so characteristic of addiction exists.
  • Important in overcoming addiction, Volkow says (very briefly) is reinforcement of the addict's own internal inhibitory processes. In other words, positive reinforcement of the addict's inner sober strivings (what LifeRing calls "empowerment of the sober self") is conceptualized as a physiologically grounded recovery strategy.
Although a great improvement over older models in which the frontal cortex was not considered a player, Volkow's enhanced model, based on brain imaging research, still is only a crude approximation. Volkow's model tends to reaffirm Sigmund Freud's basic metaphor of the brain as divided into a pleasure-seeking id (read: limbic system) and an inhibitory superego (= frontal lobes), where addiction can be seen as an excess of the former combined with a deficiency of the latter.

The reality is still more complex. Although current imaging technology may not show it, in addicted persons, the limbic system supplies not only a drive to use the substance, but also a paradoxical drive to get free of it -- a "gut" urge to stop using. And the forebrain is not only a voice for abstinence, but also a paradoxical channel for voices from the culture that promote use of the addictive substance, and an engine of rationalization for addictive use. Consequently, a recovery strategy based only on enhancement of cognitive forebrain functions is likely to (a) also enhance pro-addictive forebrain processes along with anti-addictive ones, and (b) likely to overlook (and perhaps counteract) powerful anti-addictive energies emerging from the limbic system. Effective recovery, in other words, must utilize and coordinate anti-addictive potentials in both the lower and the upper brain; it must be a whole-brain strategy.

Regrettably missing from Volkow's presentation is any reference to the role of the recently discovered "mirror neurons" in shaping social behaviors. It is also worth asking whether Volkow's eminence in brain imaging -- she is one of the world's leading experts in the field -- may not inhibit the search for relevant neurochemicals and processes in other areas of the body, e.g. the stomach. But she only had an hour. These cavils aside, if you want to see a great teacher at work, relaying the state of the art to a medical audience, take an hour and watch the video,
here. You will need the widely-available RealPlayer plug-in to view it on your computer, and of course your computer must be able to play sound.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

What is the deal with this nonsense?
I'm not taking anything away from Dr. Volkow. Her research is impecable and thorough, and the relatively young field of neuroscience is a wonderful playground for her to exercise her wits. Everybody wants to believe that modern science is going to pave the way for a 'cure'.
However, it's been proven over and over again that you can't 'cure' a spiritual malady with a pill.
What about Librium? Does anyone remember Librium? It was really popular in the 1950's as a 'cure' for alcoholism. Somehow, it was supposed to correct the enzymatic disorders associated with alcoholism. It was kind of like a prehistoric Prozac. It left its users unattached and disconnected with their emotions. They had trouble developing any meaningful relationships with people and their lives seemed kind bland and pointless.
And then we started seeing the Librium dropouts float back into A.A. You make a point of claiming to have achieved over 5 yrs. of sobriety without having to attended an A.A. meeting. I don't know if that's something to brag about. Those who are active in A.A. know the solution-- and it has very little to do with 'not drinking or using.'
The truth is that A.A. is the only thing that has proven itself to work for over any substantial period of time. It is not a 'cure'. It is a solution.

_nice_ said...

Addiction is a means of fighting the other side of oneself. As quoted by Volkow's view "fact that addicted persons both want and do not want to use the drug". If the person tries these experience and agrees the feeling of internal happiness than that would mean that the person is in part of being addicted for lifetime.
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louie

Addiction treatment and recovery resources for the addict and their families. http://www.addictiontreatment.net

Anonymous said...

Look.. your brain works by signaling other cells via differently shaped balls.. those drugs you inhale.. drink, etc... are purely by chance, similarly shaped balls... and they land on those spots associated with pleasing effects in the brain. There is no philosophic mumbo jumbo involved.. your brain has setup a mechanism to adapt to this constant "singing" of these pleasure/feel good cells and its the mechanism of tolerance, unfortunately it also lowers the amount of senstivity you'll get to other rewarding things (food sex, internet, whatever). thankfully, yes, you can cure addiction with a pill, because a pill is just a large version of stored atoms which are the right shaped balls.. the guy 2 posts above me failed high school.. he doesn't realize that a clear liquid that resembles water can completely change the will power and "soul" of a human being (the liquod = vodka.. why does it do it? the shape of the balls) welcome to nature. its beautiful once you read more.