Addiction as a brain disease revised: why it still matters, and the need for consilience

被引:0
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作者
Markus Heilig
James MacKillop
Diana Martinez
Jürgen Rehm
Lorenzo Leggio
Louk J. M. J. Vanderschuren
机构
[1] Linköping University,Center for Social and Affective Neuroscience, Department of Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
[2] McMaster University and St. Joseph’s Healthcare Hamilton,Peter Boris Centre for Addictions Research
[3] Homewood Research Institute,Institute for Mental Health Policy Research & Campbell Family Mental Health Research Institute
[4] New York State Psychiatric Institute and Columbia University Irving Medical Center,Dalla Lana School of Public Health and Department of Psychiatry
[5] Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH),Department of International Health Projects, Institute for Leadership and Health Management
[6] University of Toronto (UofT),Clinical Psychoneuroendocrinology and Neuropsychopharmacology Section, Translational Addiction Medicine Branch, National Institute on Drug Abuse Intramural Research Program and National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism
[7] Klinische Psychologie & Psychotherapie,Department of Population Health Sciences, Unit Animals in Science and Society, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine
[8] Technische Universität Dresden,undefined
[9] I.M. Sechenov First Moscow State Medical University,undefined
[10] National Institutes of Health,undefined
[11] Utrecht University,undefined
来源
Neuropsychopharmacology | 2021年 / 46卷
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摘要
The view that substance addiction is a brain disease, although widely accepted in the neuroscience community, has become subject to acerbic criticism in recent years. These criticisms state that the brain disease view is deterministic, fails to account for heterogeneity in remission and recovery, places too much emphasis on a compulsive dimension of addiction, and that a specific neural signature of addiction has not been identified. We acknowledge that some of these criticisms have merit, but assert that the foundational premise that addiction has a neurobiological basis is fundamentally sound. We also emphasize that denying that addiction is a brain disease is a harmful standpoint since it contributes to reducing access to healthcare and treatment, the consequences of which are catastrophic. Here, we therefore address these criticisms, and in doing so provide a contemporary update of the brain disease view of addiction. We provide arguments to support this view, discuss why apparently spontaneous remission does not negate it, and how seemingly compulsive behaviors can co-exist with the sensitivity to alternative reinforcement in addiction. Most importantly, we argue that the brain is the biological substrate from which both addiction and the capacity for behavior change arise, arguing for an intensified neuroscientific study of recovery. More broadly, we propose that these disagreements reveal the need for multidisciplinary research that integrates neuroscientific, behavioral, clinical, and sociocultural perspectives.
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页码:1715 / 1723
页数:8
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