NATIONAL INSTITUTES OF HEALTH
National Institute on Drug Abuse
NEW RESEARCH SHOWS EVEN A SINGLE DRUG EXPOSURE CAN ALTER BRAIN FUNCTION
Scientists have found that a single use of cocaine can modify neural
connections in the brain, and this may help explain at the cellular level
how occasional drug use can progress into a compulsion.
The researchers from the University of California in San Francisco report in
the May 31 issue of "Nature" that a single injection of cocaine
induced a
long-lasting (between 5 and 10 days) increase in excitatory synaptic
transmission in the ventral tegmental area of the brain in rats and mice. The increase in synaptic currents that were activated by cocaine had many
similarities to the changes in neural activity involved in learning and
memory processes in many areas of the brain.
"These findings on the impact of cocaine on the memory and learning
circuits
of the brain may help explain the switch from occasional drug use to
addiction. This study emphasizes the dangers of even experimenting with
cocaine and other illicit drugs," says Alan I. Leshner, Ph.D., Director of
the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA).
"The significance of this finding," says lead investigator Dr.
Antonello
Bonci, "is that the single dose of cocaine 'usurped' a cellular mechanism
involved in a normally adaptive learning process, which may help to explain
cocaine's ability to take control of incentive-motivational systems in the
brain and produce compulsive drug-seeking behavior." In addition, the researchers said that the changes that were observed in the
brains of the rats and mice may be important not just for the early stages
of addiction, but also may help explain the neural basis for relapse, where
a single exposure to cocaine after a period of abstinence can induce renewed
drug-seeking behavior.
NOTE TO REPORTERS: The full text of this article is available on the
"Nature" Web site at www.nature.com
<http://www.nature.com> .
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