grant

Forebrain neuroadaptations to chronic morphine treatment [ 2001 - 2003 ]

Also known as: How do heroin-related drugs affect brain systems that cause addiction?

Research Grant

[Cite as https://purl.org/au-research/grants/nhmrc/157158]

Researchers: Dr Peregrine Osborne (Principal investigator)

Brief description Drug addiction is caused by long term changes in brain areas that normally produce the drives that sustain normal behaviours such as eating, drinking and sex. Addictive drugs effectively hijack these brain areas so that behaviours relating to drug taking become associated with feeling good. In some individuals, over time the pattern of drug taking becomes compulsive and no longer can be controlled. This transition is now known to be due to drugs causing physical changes to certain groups of nerve cells in the brain. The affected nerve cells are responsible for causing new behaviours that appear once addiction is established. Addiction is not exclusive to humans. Animals will self-inject the same addictive drugs that humans use, and show many other kinds of addictive behaviours that parallel aspects of human addiction. Studying the effects of addictive drugs on rats and other animals has been very important in working out where and how drugs work. We now have a very good idea of which parts of the brain are affected by drugs, and it turns out that most addictive drugs act in the same places. We also now know for all of the major drugs, exactly which parts of nerve cells they affect. However, this turns out to be only the first step as the nerve cells that directly respond to drugs can affect other whole networks of nerve cells. This study is going to look at how morphine, a drug that is related to heroin, affects nerve cells in a part of the brain that helps cause addiction. It is going to work out which of the many pathways in this brain region are affected by morphine treatments that cause addiction in rats. It will then see what is happening to single nerve cells in the affected pathways. If we can understand more about these processes it may become possible to come up with new ways to treat addiction. We will also understand much more about the production of powerful emotional and behavioural drives so many of us find hard to control.

Funding Amount $AUD 435,956.26

Funding Scheme NHMRC Project Grants

Notes Standard Project Grant

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