Addiction Rehab: Psychophysiological Prediction of Choice: Relevance to Insight and Drug Addiction.

Psychophysiological prediction of choice: relevance to insight and drug addiction.

Filed under: Addiction Rehab

Brain. 2012 Nov 12;
Moeller SJ, Hajcak G, Parvaz MA, Dunning JP, Volkow ND, Goldstein RZ

An important goal of addiction research and treatment is to predict behavioural responses to drug-related stimuli. This goal is especially important for patients with impaired insight, which can interfere with therapeutic interventions and potentially invalidate self-report questionnaires. This research tested (i) whether event-related potentials, specifically the late positive potential, predict choice to view cocaine images in cocaine addiction; and (ii) whether such behaviour prediction differs by insight (operationalized in this study as self-awareness of image choice). Fifty-nine cocaine abusers and 32 healthy controls provided data for the following laboratory components that were completed in a fixed-sequence (to establish prediction): (i) event-related potential recordings while passively viewing pleasant, unpleasant, neutral and cocaine images, during which early (400-1000 ms) and late (1000-2000 ms) window late positive potentials were collected; (ii) self-reported arousal ratings for each picture; and (iii) two previously validated tasks: one to assess choice for viewing these same images, and the other to group cocaine abusers by insight. Results showed that pleasant-related late positive potentials and arousal ratings predicted pleasant choice (the choice to view pleasant pictures) in all subjects, validating the method. In the cocaine abusers, the predictive ability of the late positive potentials and arousal ratings depended on insight. Cocaine-related late positive potentials better predicted cocaine image choice in cocaine abusers with impaired insight. Another emotion-relevant event-related potential component (the early posterior negativity) did not show these results, indicating specificity of the late positive potential. In contrast, arousal ratings better predicted respective cocaine image choice (and actual cocaine use severity) in cocaine abusers with intact insight. Taken together, the late positive potential could serve as a biomarker to help predict drug-related choice-and possibly associated behaviours (e.g. drug seeking in natural settings, relapse after treatment)-when insight (and self-report) is compromised.
HubMed – addiction

 

Medical therapies for hepatocellular carcinoma: a critical view of the evidence.

Filed under: Addiction Rehab

Nat Rev Gastroenterol Hepatol. 2012 Nov 13;
Villanueva A, Hernandez-Gea V, Llovet JM

The management of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) has substantially changed in the past few decades. Improvements in patient stratification (for example, using the Barcelona Clinic Liver Cancer staging system) and the introduction of novel therapies (such as sorafenib) have improved patient survival. Nevertheless, HCC remains the third most common cause of cancer-related deaths worldwide. Decision-making largely relies on evidence-based criteria, as depicted in the US and European clinical practice guidelines, which endorse five therapeutic recommendations: resection; transplantation; radiofrequency ablation; chemoembolization; and sorafenib. However, areas still exist in which uncertainty precludes a strong recommendation, such as the role of adjuvant therapies after resection, radioembolization with yttrium-90 or second-line therapies for advanced HCC. Many clinical trials that are currently ongoing aim to answer these questions. The first reported studies, however, failed to identify novel therapeutic alternatives (that is, sunitinib, erlotinib or brivanib). Moreover, genomic profiling has enabled patient classification on the basis of molecular parameters, and has facilitated the development of new effective drugs. However, no oncogene addiction loops have been identified so far, as has been the case with other cancers such as melanoma, lung or breast cancer. Efforts that focus on the implementation of personalized medicine approaches in HCC will probably dominate research in the next decade.
HubMed – addiction

 

Brain Serotonin Function in MDMA (Ecstasy) Users: Evidence for Persisting Neurotoxicity.

Filed under: Addiction Rehab

Neuropsychopharmacology. 2013 Jan; 38(1): 253-5
M Benningfield M, Cowan RL

HubMed – addiction

 

Proteomic Analyses of PKA and AKAP Signaling in Cocaine Addiction.

Filed under: Addiction Rehab

Neuropsychopharmacology. 2013 Jan; 38(1): 251-2
Reissner KJ

HubMed – addiction

 

Preclinical studies shed light on individual variation in addiction vulnerability.

Filed under: Addiction Rehab

Neuropsychopharmacology. 2013 Jan; 38(1): 249-50
Saunders BT, Yager LM, Robinson TE

HubMed – addiction

 


 

poem i wrote about addiction. – poem that i wrote about an ex boyfriend.

 

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