Pubdate: Wed, 01 Jan 2003 Source: Daily Camera (CO) Copyright: 2003 The Daily Camera. Contact: http://www.thedailycamera.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/103 Author: Lee Bowman, Scripps Howard News Service EVIDENCE SHOWS DAMAGE TO BRAIN FROM COCAINE USE Same Cells That Trigger High Destroyed Cocaine attacks and destroys the same brain cells that trigger the "high" that cocaine users get from the drug, according to new research that provides the first direct evidence of the effect on the brain's pleasure center. "This is the clearest evidence to date that the specific neurons cocaine interacts with don't like it and are disturbed by the drug's effects," said Dr. Karley Little, an associate professor of psychiatry at the University of Michigan and chief of the VA Ann Arbor Healthcare System's Affective Neuropharmacology Laboratory. Little and his colleagues took autopsy brain tissue samples from 35 known cocaine abusers and 35 non-drug users of about the same age, sex, race and causes of death. The researchers measured several indicators of the health of the patient's dopamine brain cells, which release a pleasure-signaling chemical called dopamine. These cells interact with cocaine. In all three measures of dopamine activity, the levels were significantly lower for cocaine users than control subjects. Levels tended to be lowest for cocaine users with depression. "The questions we now face are whether the cells are dormant or damaged, is the effect reversible or permanent and is it preventable?" explained Little, lead author of a paper on the results published in the January issue of the American Journal of Psychiatry. In recent years, many researchers have come to suspect that chronic cocaine use causes the brain to adapt to the drug's presence by altering the molecules involved in dopamine release and re-uptake, and in the genetic instructions needed to make those molecules. The new study gives the most conclusive evidence yet that dopamine neurons are harmed by cocaine use. Dopamine, Little explained, triggers the reactions needed to repeat previous pleasure. More than just drug "highs," the chemical helps drive people to eat, work, feel emotions and reproduce. Normally, when something pleasurable happens, dopamine brain cells pump the chemical into the gaps between themselves and related brain cells. Dopamine finds its way to receptors on those neighboring cells, triggering signals that set off pathways to different feelings or sensations. Dopamine neurons in the brain's pleasure center die off at a steady rate over a person's lifetime. Severe damage is a hallmark of Parkinson's disease, causing a loss of movement control. When first taken, cocaine has a disruptive effect on the brain's dopamine system. It blocks the transports that return dopamine to its home cell after its signaling job is done. But with nowhere to go, dopamine builds up in the connection zone and keeps binding with other cells' receptors, sending pleasure signals out over and over again. This causes the intense cocaine high most users report. With extended use of cocaine, the brain's response to the drug is reset and drug taking at first pursued for pleasure moves to drug taking to avoid the negative feelings that come in the absence of cocaine. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart