Pubdate: Mon, 7 Apr 2008 Source: Globe and Mail (Canada) Copyright: 2008, The Globe and Mail Company Contact: http://www.globeandmail.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/168 Author: Anne McIlroy, Science Reporter Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) A TIP TO GET THAT MONKEY OFF YOUR BACK Macaques With a Low Social Standing Are More Likely to Turn to Cocaine When Feeling Anxious, Study Shows Monkeys with a low social standing are more likely to use cocaine when they are stressed than high-status animals, a study has found. The results, reported at a conference yesterday in San Diego, offer clues to the social context of drug use and addiction in humans, said Michael Nader, a professor in the department of physiology and pharmacology at Wake Forest University School of Medicine in North Carolina. He says that male cynomolgus monkeys, also known as crab-eating or long-tailed macaques, have a strict social hierarchy. If you put a bunch of them together, they fight it out to establish who is number one. The boss gets groomed by its subordinates and the other monkeys quickly get out of its way as it moves around the pen. The top macaque has more access to food and will eat all the treats in the pen. In earlier experiments, Prof. Nader found that the low-status monkeys were more likely to use cocaine if it was offered to them. They don't snort it; he fits each monkey with an intravenous catheter, so they can press a lever and pump the drug into their bloodstream. In the experiment he reported on yesterday, Prof. Nader increased the animals' stress level by making them intruders in another social group. The monkeys aren't actually shoved in with strangers. They stay in a cage beside them and for 15 minutes listen to their new neighbours fight. Afterward, the low-status monkeys indulge in significantly more cocaine. The high-status monkeys use much less of the drug. Instead, they tend to treat themselves to banana-flavoured food pellets. Prof. Nader and his colleagues have already established that being high or low status physically changes the brains of the monkeys; the bosses have more of a particular receptor - D2 - for the neurotransmitter dopamine. Dopamine is released during nerve-impulse transmission in the brain and is normally reabsorbed. Cocaine blocks this process, said Prof. Nader, and the higher levels of dopamine in the synapses, or spaces between neurons, appears to cause the "high" that cocaine users feel. Having extra D2 receptors seems to make cocaine less effective, said Prof. Nader. That's probably why the high-status monkeys use so much less of it, even when they are stressed. The next step, he said, is to see if the stressful experience decreased the number of D2 receptors in the low-status animals. This could provide a physiological explanation for why it can be difficult for people to stop using cocaine if they are under a lot of stress. Prof. Nader also reported yesterday on a new experiment that involved both high- and low-status macaques. Each monkey got some time on its own in a larger pen with a chance to explore and learn different ways to get treats. The enriched environment led to a decreased use of cocaine in all of the monkeys. The next phase in the research involves assessing if the three-day vacation increased the number of D2 receptors, especially in the low-status macaques. In humans, he says, an "enriched environment" would involve having a steady job and the support of family or friends. It wouldn't be prison, he says. But studies have shown that people jailed for drug use who get a job after they are released are less likely to relapse, he says. The kind of experiments he does with monkeys wouldn't be possible with humans, Prof. Nader said. But he is hopeful that his work will lead to a more effective approach to helping addicts. As for the monkeys, Prof. Nader says they take such low doses of the drug and they are so active that he can't see any difference when they are on it. "You don't get the impression that they are strung out." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake