Recovery Research Institute, Center for Addiction Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Harvard Medical School, Harvard University, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Addict Biol. 2022 Jan;27(1):e12958. doi: 10.1111/adb.12958. Epub 2020 Aug 12.
Much research seeks to articulate the brain structures and pathways implicated in addiction and addiction recovery. Prominent neurobiological models emphasize the interplay between cortical and limbic brain regions as a main driver of addictive processes, but largely do not take into consideration sensory and visceral information streams that link context and state to the brain and behavior. Yet these brain-body information streams would seem to be necessary elements of a comprehensive model of addiction. As a starting point, we describe the overlap between one current model of addiction circuitry and the neural network that not only regulates cardiovascular system activity but also receives feedback from peripheral cardiovascular processes through the baroreflex loop. We highlight the need for neurobiological, molecular, and behavioral studies of neural and peripheral cardiovascular signal integration during the experience of internal states and environmental contexts that drive alcohol and other drug use behaviors. We end with a call for systematic, mechanistic research on the promising, yet largely unexamined benefits to addiction treatment of neuroscience-informed, adjunctive interventions that target the malleability of the cardiovascular system to alter brain processes.
许多研究都试图阐明与成瘾和成瘾康复相关的大脑结构和通路。突出的神经生物学模型强调皮质和边缘脑区之间的相互作用是成瘾过程的主要驱动因素,但在很大程度上没有考虑到将上下文和状态与大脑和行为联系起来的感觉和内脏信息流。然而,这些脑体信息流似乎是成瘾综合模型的必要组成部分。作为一个起点,我们描述了当前成瘾电路模型之一与神经网络之间的重叠,该神经网络不仅调节心血管系统活动,还通过压力反射环路从外周心血管过程接收反馈。我们强调需要进行神经生物学、分子生物学和行为学研究,以了解在内部状态和环境背景下,神经和外周心血管信号如何整合,从而驱动酒精和其他药物使用行为。最后,我们呼吁系统地、以机制为基础开展研究,探索以神经科学为指导的、辅助性的干预措施,针对心血管系统的可塑件来改变大脑过程,从而为成瘾治疗带来有希望但在很大程度上尚未被研究的益处。