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Tolerance  Definition: Diminished drug effectiveness or potency resulting from repeated (chronic) use.  Decreased efficacy ○ Downward shift  Decreased potency ○ Rightward shift Cross Tolerance   When tolerance to one drug diminishes the effects of another drug Often observed between members of same drug class  All opiates display cross-tolerance  Alcohol may exhibit cross-tolerance with other substances with similar pharmacological actions, such as the benzodiazepines (e.g., Valium, Xanax) Mechanisms of Tolerance  Metabolic (dispositional) Tolerance  e.g., Alcohol and barbiturates increased liver enzyme activity.  e.g., Amphetamine alters urine pH, making it more acidic, which increases excretion of amphetamine.  Physiological (pharmacodynamic, cellular) Tolerance  e.g., receptor affinity or number altered by drug actions  disruption of homeostatic processes may be critical  Behavioral Tolerance  Learning to compensate for drug-induced impairments  respondent or operant conditioning Physical Dependence  Withdrawal symptoms  Physiological changes when chronic drug use is stopped  Particular withdrawal symptoms depend on the drug ○ Opiate withdrawal: flulike symptoms ○ Alcohol withdrawal: DTs, possible seizures ○ Many drugs do not produce PHYSICAL dependence ○ Drugs with similar actions tend to produce similar withdrawal symptoms  Cross Dependence  Drugs with similar actions will alleviate withdrawal symptoms from another drug. ○ e.g., methadone for heroin dependence, benzodiazepines for alcohol dependence Tolerance and Respondent Conditioning  Respondent Conditioning of Drug Effects  Pavlov’s early work with apomorphine  Conditioned Compensatory Responses  the CR may not be opposite the UR  The body’s attempts to resist the drug’s effects, rather than the drug effects themselves may be what are conditioned.  Siegel’s research on respondent conditioning of tolerance to the analgesic effects of morphine in rats. Tolerance and Respondent Conditioning  Conditioned Compensatory Responses  May be difficult to extinguish  May persist long after physical withdrawal symptoms no longer evident  Environmental cues may contribute to relapse Tolerance and Operant Conditioning  Campbell and Seiden (1973)  Tolerance to amphetamine in rats treated prior to DRL training sessions, not after.  Schuster et al. (1966)  Tolerance did not develop to rate-increasing effects of amphetamine on an FI schedule.  Vogel-Sprott (1992)  role of reinforcement in conditioned tolerance to alcohol in humans Sensitization  Enhance effects of drug following repeated exposure  Less common than tolerance  Most often studied in nonhuman species ○ Activating effects of drugs  Conditioned sensitization  Cross sensitization Models of Addiction Disease Model  Physical Dependence Model  Positive Reinforcement Model  Disease Model  Historical Background  Social reform of the 19th century  AA movement of the mid-20th century  Potential Strengths of Disease Model  Considers addictive behavior abnormal  Explains why only some develop addiction  Implications for Therapy vs. Punishment Disease Model  Problems/Limitations of Disease Model  Mechanisms not well understood  Accepting “loss of control” as an explanation may reduce the addicts accountability  Characterizing addiction as a disease  Predisposition Theories  Exposure Theories  Acceptance/rejection of the disease model depends on the definition of “disease”, more so than an understanding of mechanisms responsible for addiction. Physical Dependence Model Historical Background  Drug seeking motivated by fear of severe withdrawal symptoms.   What about drugs that don’t produce physical dependence? Defining Psychological Dependence  Problems/Limitations Dependence Theories of Addiction  Positive Reinforcement Model  Modern Behavioral Neuroscience Explanation for Addiction  Based on key findings that many drugs can be established as positive reinforcers  Problems with Positive Reinforcement Model Drug Self-Administration  Similarities/Differences Between Human and Nonhuman Species  Type of Drug ○ Most psychoactive drugs that are abused by humans are also self-administered by nonhumans. ○ Some drugs (e.g., LSD) are not selfadministered by nonhumans.  Patterns of Self-Administration ○ Patterns of use are comparable between humans and monkeys (see figure 5-2) Measuring Reinforcing Value of Drugs Rate: not an ideal measure  Progressive Ratio Schedules  Concurrent Schedules (choice)  Place Conditioning Procedures  Factors that Modulate Reinforcing Value of Drugs Dose Effects  Genetic Differences  Task Demands  Stress  Previous Drug Experience  Neuroanatomy of Motivation/Reinforcement    Olds and Milner (1954) Median Forebrain Bundle Mesolimbic Dopamine Pathways  VTA -> Nucleus Accumbens Incentive Sensitization Theory  Robinson and Berridge (1993)  A model to explain drug craving  Craving is conceptualized as a manifestation of incentive salience, which becomes stronger with repeated drug use due to the sensitization of the mesolimbic dopamine system to drug effects.  Repeated presentation of a reinforcer causes the stimuli associated with it to also have greater incentive salience.  Repeated use of a drug increases its reinforcing value and its capacity to control behavior. Behavioral Economics Matching Law  Price and Demand  Marilyn Carroll (1993)   Generated demand curves from studies of PCP consumption under different FR ratio schedules in rhesus monkeys