Pubdate: Thu, 30 Aug 2001 Source: Register-Guard, The (OR) Copyright: 2001 The Register-Guard Contact: http://www.registerguard.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/362 Author: William McCall, The Associated Press SCANNER AIDS OHSU DRUG ABUSE STUDY PORTLAND - Oregon is expanding a federal research program into drug abuse with a powerful new brain scanner, whose funding was announced Wednesday, that doctors hope will help find the genetic pathways leading to addiction. State officials joined Al Brandenstein, chief scientist for the Office of National Drug Control Policy, to announce a $4 million federal grant to build one of the nation's most powerful magnetic resonance imaging devices at Oregon Health Sciences University. An MRI uses an extremely strong magnetic field to create images of structures deep inside the body, including the brain. An MRI scan is painless and noninvasive, similar to an X-ray, but without any radiation. It also can reveal much more detail. The Oregon project is one of a dozen around the country to pool research efforts into drug abuse, and one of only four with advanced MRI scanners dedicated to research into addiction. The most powerful MRI machine in the nation dedicated to drug abuse research is at Massachusetts General Hospital. Brandenstein said the program has helped government policy-makers understand that addiction is a disease and should be treated as a medical problem, rather than a crime. "These aren't bad people, they are people who suffer from a disease," he said. The Oregon scanner, which will not be quite as powerful as the machine at Massachusetts General, will be used for research into the effects of anabolic steroids, methamphetamine and cocaine. It also will be used to find the genes that researchers suspect play a major role in addiction. "The imaging center will be of great benefit to scientists spanning multiple disciplines," said Jeri Janowsky, an OHSU neurology researcher. She said scientists expect to quickly find ways for doctors to use the research to help patients, especially teens who abuse steroids to enhance their athletic performance, or to reduce methamphetamine addiction, a problem that is especially serious in Oregon and other Western states. "This is technology that can be transferred directly to the clinics," Janowsky said. MRI scanners have already shown researchers how brain activity differs under the influence of various drugs, giving them a better understanding of the chemical processes that underlie addiction. Brandenstein said controlling drug abuse will be much easier for doctors, especially psychiatrists dealing with seriously addicted patients, when they have ways to manage brain chemistry to end the abuse or even prevent it. Completion of the Oregon MRI research center is expected in 2003. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart