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Addiction vaccines

I finally got around to reading the print version of the recent Newsweek cover story about the development of effective addiction vaccines. The article was quite informative, well worth a look:

fMRI and PET scans are forcing that infuriating organ, the addicted brain, to yield up its secrets. Geneticists have found the first few (of what is likely to be many) gene variants that predispose people to addiction, helping explain why only about one person in 10 who tries an addictive drug actually becomes hooked on it. Neuroscientists are mapping the intricate network of triggers and feedback loops that are set in motion by the taste—or, for that matter, the sight or thought—of a beer or a cigarette; they have learned to identify the signal that an alcoholic is about to pour a drink even before he's aware of it himself, and trace the impulse back to its origins in the primitive midbrain. And they are learning to interrupt and control these processes at numerous points along the way. Among more than 200 compounds being developed or tested by NIDA are ones that block the intoxicating effects of drugs, including vaccines that train the body's own immune system to bar them from the brain. Other compounds have the amazing ability to intervene in the cortex in the last milliseconds before the impulse to reach for a glass translates into action. To the extent that "willpower" is a meaningful concept at all, the era of willpower-in-a-pill may be just over the horizon.

For some reason, when I was first introduced to the concept of addiction vaccines, my suspicious nature immediately leapt to the Orwellian conclusion that these vaccines would be used preemptively on non-addicted populations someday, and my hackles were always raised by that. Over time, I came to realize how naive that view was. For people whose lives are controlled or nearly destroyed by drug addiction, the extra boost provided by an effective vaccine might literally be the thing that saves them, and gives them another chance at normalcy.

Posted By Scotto at 2008-03-17 10:04:41 permalink | comments
Tags: addiction vaccine
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guest : 2008-03-18 14:05:42
IBOGAINE

IBOGA

douche163. : 2008-03-17 23:44:32
The way the world works you usually get something else in return, In this case I`m sure it`s going to be some kind of dopamine deficiency.
HellKatonWheelz. : 2008-03-17 12:31:46
Brandon, I don't think that eliminating the physically addictive aspects of a drug will necessarily reduce addiction as a whole. In most cases, physical addiction develops out of psychological addiction. If there was a reliable way to treat the psychological aspects - the need to be altered - I think it would be a tremendous step towards removing the stigma from the substances themselves.
dan. : 2008-03-17 12:12:55
"I'm not judging others, but for myself, using something like Vivitrol or Campral feels like a crutch," says one longtime AA member, who, following the organization's practice, asked not to be named. "It's not true sobriety."

But he/she is not judging others!

Brandon : 2008-03-17 12:07:51
It will be interesting when non addictive versions of cocain, meth and heroin are made. This will happen, most likely with opiods, to make safer painkillers for medicine. Imagine if you could take these drugs with no risk of (physical) addiction. What will we do when this happens, make the new drugs freely available or keep them illegal? The illegal drug distributors will be unlikely to market them, since they will likely be completely synthetic and difficult to make.

Another scenario is that a second drug could be co-administered that would inhibit the addictive actions of the recreational drug. This would unlikely be made illegal, but would be expensive (at least at first). You could then have an upper class taking heroin and not getting addicted, while a lower class would get addicted.

dan. : 2008-03-17 12:02:56
"But the word itself comes from the Latin addictus, a debtor who was indentured to work off what he owed; someone addicted to alcohol or drugs is powerless over his or her fate in the same way—except debtors-as-addicts can never fully balance the books." - this is impossible to prove, but then again I guess it is Newsweek.
Nowhere Girl. : 2008-03-17 11:22:57
I guess this must be the same thing which was more detailled in a report by the Center for Cognitive Liberty and Ethics. Their terminology is a bit confusing: when I first read about this problem, it was called "anti-drug vaccines", the CCLE uses the term "pharmacotherapy drug" (imo not the best name since it can refer to many various medicines). Generally their report is very interesting, while they support more research to develop these drugs as available treatment for addicted people seeking help, they also warn of a situation in which the use of these "vaccines" could become compulsory for some groups, like parolees, welfare recipients, schoolchildren... It it's the same thing - and it clearly seems so - the name "addiction vaccine" is also very misleading, if not simply - manipulatory. These substances don't treat addiction, they block the effects of psychoactives, thus making trying them pointless - in this sense a person taking them is indeed protected from getting hooked. "Every stick has two ends", while these drugs can be enormously beneficial for people struggling with addiction - they also mean a threat of solving the "drug problem" by making people unresponsive to drugs. What no article this far says, is for example how long would those vaccines work... anyway, again I recommend the CCLE report, there are much details there.

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