303 research outputs found

    Der Gebrauch illegaler Substanzen im deutschsprachigen Raum

    Full text link
    Substanzkonsumstörungen belasten Betroffene und ihren Angehörigen und gehen mit hohen Kosten fĂŒr die Gesellschaft einher. Da die Verbreitung des Konsums psychotroper Substanzen mit dem Risiko von Konsumstörungen verbunden ist, sind nationale Monitoring-Programme zum illegalen Substanzkonsum hilfreich zur Risiko- und KostenabschĂ€tzung. Allerdings weisen Umfragemethoden – meist Selbstberichte in Telefoninterviews oder Onlinebefragungen, methodische SchwĂ€chen auf, wie Abwasseruntersuchungen auf DrogenrĂŒckstĂ€nde in europĂ€ischen StĂ€dten nahelegen. In der vorliegenden Arbeit werden die Daten reprĂ€sentativer Umfragen aus Deutschland, Österreich und der Schweiz, zusammen mit den jĂŒngsten Daten aus Abwasseruntersuchungen, besprochen. In Europa und im deutschsprachigen Raum steigen der Cannabiskonsum und die Nachfragen zur Behandlung von Cannabiskonsumstörungen an. WĂ€hrend in Deutschland zusĂ€tzlich der Amphetaminkonsum und assoziierte Behandlungsnachfragen zunehmen, scheint sich in der Schweiz v. a. der Kokainkonsum zu verbreiten. Auch der Konsum von 3,4-Methylendioxy-N-methylamphetamin („Ecstasy“) steigt in Deutschland und der Schweiz an, wie Abwasseruntersuchungen nahelegen. Opiate, wie Heroin, werden im deutschsprachigen Raum derzeit weniger konsumiert, obwohl spezialisierte Behandlungsnachfragen durch Altkonsumenten aus frĂŒheren Heroinwellen weiter hoch sind. ZukĂŒnftige drogenpolitische Regulierungsmodelle stehen vor der Herausforderung, zugleich den repressiven Anteil der Gesetzgebung zu vermindern, aber dennoch den problematischen Konsum in der Gesamtbevölkerung und besonders von Jugendlichen zu senken. Ein erster möglicher Schritt wĂ€re die Entkriminalisierung des Konsums (nicht des Verkaufs), um Betroffene mit Substanzkonsumstörungen vor Repressionen und weiterer Marginalisierung zu schĂŒtzen

    Kokain – eine Substanz auf dem Weg zur Volksdroge?

    Full text link

    How Realistic Are the Scientific Assumptions of the Neuroenhancement Debate? Assessing the Pharmacological Optimism and Neuroenhancement Prevalence Hypotheses

    Get PDF
    Since two decades, neuroenhancement is a major topic in neuroethics and still receives much attention in the scholarly literature as well as in public media. In contrast to high hopes at the beginning of the "Decade of the Brain" in the United States and Europe that we subsume under the "pharmacological optimism hypothesis," recent evidence from clinical neuroscience suggests that developing drugs that make healthy people smarter is even more difficult than finding new treatments for patients with mental disorders. However, cognitive enhancing drugs even for patients with impaired intellectual performance have not been successfully developed yet and new drugs that might have a disruptive impact on this field are unlikely to be developed in the near future. Additionally, we discuss theoretical, empirical, and historical evidence to assess whether cognitive enhancement of the healthy is common or even epidemic and if its application will further increase in the near future, as suggested by the "neuroenhancement prevalence hypothesis." Reports, surveys, and reviews from the 1930s until today indicate that psychopharmacological neuroenhancement is a fact but less common than often stated, particularly in the public media. Non-medical use of psychostimulants for the purpose of cognitive enhancement exists since at least 80 years and it might actually have been more common in the past than today. Therefore, we conclude that the pharmacological optimism hypothesis and neuroenhancement prevalence hypotheses have to be rejected and argue that the neuroenhancement debate should take the available evidence more into account

    Serotonin and Schizophrenia

    Full text link

    Psilocybin-induced deficits in automatic and controlled inhibition are attenuated by ketanserin in healthy human volunteers

    Full text link
    The serotonin-2A receptor (5-HT(2A)R) has been implicated in the pathogenesis of schizophrenia and related inhibitory gating and behavioral inhibition deficits of schizophrenia patients. The hallucinogen psilocybin disrupts automatic forms of sensorimotor gating and response inhibition in humans, but it is unclear so far whether the 5-HT(2A)R or 5-HT(1A)R agonist properties of its bioactive metabolite psilocin account for these effects. Thus, we investigated whether psilocybin-induced deficits in automatic and controlled inhibition in healthy humans could be attenuated by the 5-HT(2A/2C)R antagonist ketanserin. A total of 16 healthy participants received placebo, ketanserin (40 mg p.o.), psilocybin (260 Όg/kg p.o.), or psilocybin plus ketanserin in a double-blind, randomized, and counterbalanced order. Sensorimotor gating was measured by prepulse inhibition (PPI) of the acoustic startle response. The effects on psychopathological core dimensions and behavioral inhibition were assessed by the altered states of consciousness questionnaire (5D-ASC), and the Color-Word Stroop Test. Psilocybin decreased PPI at short lead intervals (30 ms), increased all 5D-ASC scores, and selectively increased errors in the interference condition of the Stroop Test. Stroop interference and Stroop effect of the response latencies were increased under psilocybin as well. Psilocybin-induced alterations were attenuated by ketanserin pretreatment, whereas ketanserin alone had no significant effects. These findings suggest that the disrupting effects of psilocybin on automatic and controlled inhibition processes are attributable to 5-HT(2A)R stimulation. Sensorimotor gating and attentional control deficits of schizophrenia patients might be due to changes within the 5-HT(2A)R system

    Effects of the mu-opioid receptor agonist morphine on facial mimicry and emotion recognition

    Full text link
    Facial mimicry and emotion recognition are two socio-cognitive abilities involved in adaptive socio-emotional behavior, promoting affiliation and the establishment of social bonds. The mu-opioid receptor (MOR) system plays a key role in affiliation and social bonding. However, it remains unclear whether MORs are involved in the categorization and spontaneous mimicry of emotional facial expressions. Using a randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind, between-subjects design, we investigated in 82 healthy female volunteers the effects of the specific MOR agonist morphine on the recognition accuracy of emotional faces (happiness, anger, fear), and on their facial mimicry (measured with electromyography). Frequentist statistics did not reveal any significant effects of drug administration on facial mimicry or emotion recognition abilities. However, post hoc Bayesian analyses provided support for an effect of morphine on facial mimicry of fearful facial expressions. Specifically, compared to placebo, morphine reduced mimicry of fear, as shown by lower activity of the frontalis muscle. Bayesian analyses also provided support for the absence of a drug effect on mimicry of happy and angry facial expressions, which were assessed with the zygomaticus major and corrugator supercilii muscles, as well as on emotion recognition accuracy. These findings suggest that MOR activity is involved in automatic facial responses to fearful stimuli, but not in their identification. Overall, the current results, together with the previously reported small effects of opioid compounds, suggest a relatively marginal role of the MOR system in emotion simulation and perception. Keywords: EMG; Emotion recognition; Facial mimicry; Mu-opioid system; Social affiliation

    Pattern of predictive features of continued cannabis use in patients with recent-onset psychosis and clinical high-risk for psychosis

    Full text link
    Continued cannabis use (CCu) is an important predictor for poor long-term outcomes in psychosis and clinically high-risk patients, but no generalizable model has hitherto been tested for its ability to predict CCu in these vulnerable patient groups. In the current study, we investigated how structured clinical and cognitive assessments and structural magnetic resonance imaging (sMRI) contributed to the prediction of CCu in a group of 109 patients with recent-onset psychosis (ROP). We tested the generalizability of our predictors in 73 patients at clinical high-risk for psychosis (CHR). Here, CCu was defined as any cannabis consumption between baseline and 9-month follow-up, as assessed in structured interviews. All patients reported lifetime cannabis use at baseline. Data from clinical assessment alone correctly classified 73% (p  0.093), and their addition to the interview-based predictor via stacking did not improve prediction significantly, either in the ROP or CHR groups (ps > 0.065). Lower functioning, specific substance use patterns, urbanicity and a lack of other coping strategies contributed reliably to the prediction of CCu and might thus represent important factors for guiding preventative efforts. Our results suggest that it may be possible to identify by clinical measures those psychosis-spectrum patients at high risk for CCu, potentially allowing to improve clinical care through targeted interventions. However, our model needs further testing in larger samples including more diverse clinical populations before being transferred into clinical practice

    Threat memory reminder under matrix metalloproteinase 9 inhibitor doxycycline globally reduces subsequent memory plasticity

    Full text link
    Associative memory can be rendered malleable by a reminder. Blocking the ensuing re-consolidation process is suggested as a therapeutic target for unwanted aversive memories. Matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)-9 is required for structural synapse remodelling involved in memory consolidation. Inhibiting MMP-9 with doxycycline is suggested to attenuate human threat conditioning. Here, we investigate whether MMP-9 inhibition also interferes with threat memory re-consolidation. N=78 male and female human participants learned the association between two visual conditioned stimuli (CS+) and a 50% chance of an unconditioned nociceptive stimulus (US), and between CS- and the absence of US. On day 7, one CS+ was reminded without reinforcement 3.5 hours after ingesting either 200 mg doxycycline, or placebo. On day 14, retention of CS memory was assessed under extinction, by fear-potentiated startle. Contrary to our expectations, we observed a greater CS+/CS- difference in participants who were reminded under doxycycline, compared to placebo. Participants who were reminded under placebo showed extinction learning during the retention test, which was not observed in the doxycycline group. There was no difference between the reminded and the non-reminded CS+ in either group. In contrast, during re-learning after the retention test, CS+/CS- difference was more pronounced in the placebo than the doxycycline group. To summarize, a single dose of doxycycline appeared to have no specific impact on re-consolidation, but to globally impair extinction learning, and threat re-learning, after drug clearance.MMP-9 inhibition appears to attenuate memory consolidation. It could also be a target for blocking reconsolidation. Here, we test this hypothesis in human threat conditioning. We find that doxycycline has no specific impact on a reminded cue, but confers a global reduction in extinction learning and threat learning beyond the clearance of the drug. This may point towards a more long-lasting impact of doxycycline treatment on memory plasticity
    • 

    corecore