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Looking at Your Brain on Drugs

If addicts watch their brain's changing blood flow during a craving, they may be able to train themselves to kick the habit.

By Emily Singer

Monday, October 30, 2006

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For a recovering drug addict, the sight of a hypodermic needle or a crack pipe--or even the exterior of a drug house--can trigger powerful cravings. Now scientists hope to use new brain-imaging technology to train substance abusers to control cravings. The addicts would literally watch real-time images of brain blood flow and use mental exercises to try to control their brain activity.

"We hope to develop a novel therapeutic for addiction, which will create a new way of treating these patients," says Christopher deCharms, founder of Omneuron, a brain-imaging company in Menlo Park, CA, that is planning a study to test the approach.

While much is still unknown about what happens in the brain during a craving for drugs such as cocaine and nicotine, recent imaging studies have shown that certain parts of the brain are hyperactive in addicts when they are shown drug-related pictures or movies. DeCharms and colleagues plan to build on these findings using a new type of brain-imaging technology that enables both subject and researcher to look at the brain's activity as the subject thinks. Known as real-time functional magnetic resonance imaging, or fMRI, the technology measures blood flow to different parts of the brain, indicating which parts of the brain are most active at a given time.

Omneuron researchers theorize that an addict could use mental exercises to try to increase or decrease activity in a specific part of the brain, enlisting the fMRI feedback to guide his or her progress. For example, in a cognitive-therapy exercise taught in pain clinics, patients with chronic pain are instructed to imagine their brain releasing pain-killing chemicals. The fMRI feedback process is similar to biofeedback, through which people learn to control their blood pressure or heart rate by getting constant feedback on their vital signs. With the Omneuron approach, the feedback would come from a monitor showing the addicts real-time pictures of blood flow in the brain.

DeCharms's group has shown that the method works for controlling chronic pain: patients who were taught to control activity in the anterior cingulate cortex, an area involved in processing pain, experienced more pain relief than control groups did. (See Seeing Your Pain.) In the new study, researchers plan to compare brain-activity patterns in addicts when they are using versus not using a drug, or when they are shown pictures that trigger drug cravings versus neutral images. Researchers would then try to teach the subjects how to voluntarily bring their brain activity back to its calm, drug-free state.

"We're just in the early stages of this research, but the hope is that rather than using purely pharmacologic or cognitive [therapy] approaches, this would provide another avenue to treat this major disorder," says deCharms. His group has done an initial pilot study of the technology and is now in the planning stages of a larger study. It's too early to estimate when such a technique, if successful, would be available to patients.

Brain-imaging and addiction experts are excited about the possibilities. Nora Volkow, director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), says she has been considering this application of real-time fMRI since deCharms first published his paper showing that the technique could help chronic pain. (The research for this paper was funded by NIDA.) "Wouldn't it be wonderful if we could train the brain to regulate the response to craving?" she says.

Comments

  • dependency
    People who suffer from the effects of alcohol and drug dependencies are nothing new. They are as old as time itself. Part of the problem is in formulating a strong psychological process to help the person deal with the absence of reality. The early Catholic Church knew what they were talking about when they summed it up by saying, 'Spiritus Contra Spiritum.'
    Rate this comment: 12345

    phoenix
    10/30/2006
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  • fMRI and Drug Addiction
    Notwithstanding the incredible work that  Christopher deCharms is doing at OMNUERON, as well as the work which continue at Brookhaven and Columbia, and being that I have a declared bias in the area, I suggest a careful assessment is necessary.  The use of this tool has merit provided that it remains within the clinical/therapeutic realm and does not allowed to venture into the realm of phantasmagoria that is the world of ‘Forensic Assessment’. It is within this realm that it has absolutely no place as evidence over than that the viewer recognized and identified with something that appeared on the screen that was similar or not to something referenced before. Extreme care must be taken on this level.
    Further to this, I have to question the economic viability of using an fMRI as a tool to mitigate addictive behavior. The one benefit I do see is the possibility of constructive intimidation, a craft I practice myself during interventions., however the shear operational economies of such a machine would likely eliminate it from all but the most exclusive of clientelle. For my part, I am in the process of storyboarding the triple bypass surgery about to be done on a Very Scared Crystal Meth addict, at his request which will be ultimately used for just such constructive intimidation. Of course tit is widely recognized that when dealing with Crystal Meth addiction, none of the conventional treatment rules apply.
    Rate this comment: 12345

    RedSevenOne
    10/30/2006
    Posts:18
    Avg Rating:
    1/5

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