Showing posts with label glutamate. Show all posts
Showing posts with label glutamate. Show all posts

October 2013 Newsletter

It's almost the end of the year. In our setting, because we are moving into summer and festivities, this usually sees a drop in those seeking help for their substance use issues, but often their is a brief spike shortly after new year as resolutions are made and the after-effects of the partying are felt! I recently attended the Dan Siegel Interpersonal Neurobiology workshop that was held in Cape Town, hence the photo. In this month's edition of Addiction Information we hope to spark some thought around some controversial topics, but one topic that should become less controversial is that of opioid substitution therapy, for which their seems to be mounting evidence as a stand-alone treatment modality.

We look at: An opioid addiction switch, Behavioural Interventions and Buprenorphine Maintenance, Chronic Care, Remission Rates, Choice and Will Power, Dr Dan Siegel and the Mind & Life Conference.

Sex, Drugs, and No Control

Sex as Addiction and the Treatment Thereof
There is much controversy around the use of the term "sex addiction." This article gives a brief overview of the arguments against this term, and then shows some of the aspects as to why sex may indeed be an addiction and how it may be treated. There is certainly a need for further research in this area before anything definitive can be proclaimed, but perhaps the study of behaviours that present as addiction can give us further insight and understanding of exogenous addictions.
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According to the DSM-V Sex Addiction is not a diagnosable condition. Sexual addiction was mentioned in the DSM-III-R, but disappeared in the DSM-IV, threatened a come-back in the DSM-V but has now been discarded. Sex, however, has long been described as addictive. In the late 1800s Freud described masturbation as the “original addiction.” Rado in the 20’s described addiction as “compulsive” and made the reward/pleasure/sex link. We saw words such as nymphomania (Ellis) and the clumsy “Don Juanism”(Stoller). In the 70’s Mac Dougall spoke of “addictive sexuality”. It was originally proposed that sex be included under the heading of addiction in the DSM-5, and then that was discarded and the idea of hyper-sexuality was introduced as a possibility. Eventually none of these proposals was accepted, and so sexual addiction has ceased to exist, according to the DSM, that is.

The neurobiological underpinnings of addiction.


A brief overview of our current understanding of the neurobiological processes that underlie addiction.


PDF Version Plus Figures 
It is only recently that the idea that addiction is a brain disease has begun to be accepted by the general population. The disease model was at the centre of the AA/NA message long before it became accepted by even the medical field. As we make advances in neuroscience we are finding that many of the conclusions drawn from anecdotal evidence have, in fact, a sound neurobiological basis. There is indeed a strong neurological underpinning for addiction, and in this essay I will summarise the current understanding of this.