Addiction Medicine: Closing the Gap between Science and Practice

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Addiction Is a Brain Disease..............................................................................................


Advances in neuroscientific research, including
animal studies and brain imaging, demonstrate
clearly that addiction is a primary and often
chronic disease of the brain.* 4 The risk factors
for developing the disease include a genetic
predisposition and a range of biological,
psychological and environmental influences.^5
There is a growing body of evidence showing
the brain circuits that are implicated in substance
addiction in general also are involved in other
compulsive or addictive behaviors such as those
related to gambling, certain forms of disordered
eating (e.g., bulimia, obesity) and compulsive
sexual activity.^6 For these reasons, researchers
are beginning to explore whether substance
addiction might be part of a syndrome
characterized by:


 Shared neurobiological and psychosocial
antecedents (risk factors);


 Production of desirable effects upon
involvement with the rewarding object or
activity;


 Shared manifestations and outcomes (e.g.,
biological ones such as tolerance or
withdrawal or behavioral or psychological
ones such as deceit, shame, guilt or
depression); and


 A shared course of the disease (e.g.,
improvement, relapse, remission and the
potential for progression to disability or
death).^7



  • A primary disease indicates that it is not simply a


symptom or effect of another disease or condition.


The focus of this report is on addiction involving
nicotine, alcohol and other drugs. Use of these
substances can result from an existing brain
dysfunction; use also can alter the structure and
function of the brain, dramatically affecting
judgment and behavior.^8 The amount and
duration of substance use that results in brain
changes and addiction depends on the individual
and the particular substances used.† 9

As yet, there is no conclusive biological marker
of addiction; therefore the diagnosis of addiction
is based on its symptoms including the
compulsive use of addictive substances,
significantly impaired function and persistent
use despite negative consequences.‡ 10 These
symptoms that characterize addiction are
cognitive and behavioral manifestations of the
underlying disease and its effects on the brain.^11
The foundations of the disease may exist in
certain individuals even before they ever use an
addictive substance and, in some cases, once the
disease develops it persists even when an
individual is not actively engaged in substance
use.^12

† The addictive potential of a substance is
determined not only by its intrinsic ability to
stimulate the reward circuits of the brain, but also by
the speed with which it crosses the blood-brain
barrier (i.e., how soon after initial
ingestion/injection/inhalation it reaches receptors in
reward circuits of the brain).
‡ Other physical signs such as intoxication,
withdrawal, needle-related findings, co-infections,
and laboratory findings--such as abnormalities in
liver function tests or positive breath or urine tests--
can aid in the diagnosis.

Unfortunately, keeping the emphasis on just the
behavioral manifestations presumes that the
problem is present when the behavior is present
and the problem is resolved if the behavior is not
present for whatever duration of time, even
though the underlying disease process may be
present and even progressing, or contributing to
other manifestations, signs and symptoms that
may be overlooked.^13

...addiction is not about drugs, it’s about
brains. It is not the substances a person uses
that make them an addict; it is not even the
quantity or frequency of use. Addiction is about
what happens in a person’s brain when they are
exposed to rewarding substances or rewarding
behaviors, and it is more about reward circuitry
in the brain and related brain structures than it
is about the external chemicals or behavior that
“turn on” that reward circuitry.^14
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