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Published in: European Archives of Psychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience 2/2009

01-11-2009

Learning and memory in the aetiopathogenesis of addiction: future implications for therapy?

Authors: Christoph von der Goltz, Falk Kiefer

Published in: European Archives of Psychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience | Special Issue 2/2009

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Abstract

Addiction is a chronic relapsing disorder. Even after long periods of abstinence from drugs, the risk of relapse, often precipitated by drug-associated cues, remains high. Especially learning processes have been shown to play a major role in the maintenance of addictive behaviour. Humans and animals rapidly learn cues and contexts that predict the availability of addictive drugs. Once learned, these cues and contexts initiate drug seeking, craving and relapse in both animal models and clinical studies. These observations have converged on the hypothesis that addiction represents the pathological usurpation of neural processes that normally serve reward-related learning. In this context, a substantial body of evidence suggests that several types of neuroadaptation occur, including synapse-specific adaptations of the type thought to underlie specific long-term associative memory. Consequently, understanding learning and memory processes in the brain in addiction is an important key for understanding the persistence of addiction, and it is reasonable to hypothesize that the disruption of drug-related memories may help to prevent relapses.
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Metadata
Title
Learning and memory in the aetiopathogenesis of addiction: future implications for therapy?
Authors
Christoph von der Goltz
Falk Kiefer
Publication date
01-11-2009
Publisher
D. Steinkopff-Verlag
Published in
European Archives of Psychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience / Issue Special Issue 2/2009
Print ISSN: 0940-1334
Electronic ISSN: 1433-8491
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00406-009-0057-6

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