4.7 Article

The Protective Effect of Social Reward on Opioid and Psychostimulant Reward and Relapse: Behavior, Pharmacology, and Brain Regions

期刊

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
卷 42, 期 50, 页码 9298-9314

出版社

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0931-22.2022

关键词

addiction; animal models; craving; opioids; psychostimulants; social behavior

资金

  1. National Institute on Drug Abuse [DA047976, FI2GM142476]
  2. BBRF Young Investigator Award
  3. National Institute on Drug Abuse Intramural Research Program

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This article discusses the role of social factors in addiction research using animal models. Social isolation promotes drug use and relapse, while social connections provide protection. The article summarizes the effects of different experimental procedures on opioids and psychostimulants, and suggests future research directions in the addiction field.
Until recently, most modern neuroscience research on addiction using animal models did not incorporate manipulations of social factors. Social factors play a critical role in human addiction: social isolation and exclusion can promote drug use and relapse, while social connections and inclusion tend to be protective. Here, we discuss the state of the literature on social factors in animal models of opioid and psychostimulant preference, self-administration, and relapse. We first summarize results from rodent studies on behavioral, pharmacological, and circuit mechanisms of the protective effect of traditional experimenter-controlled social interaction procedures on opioid and psychostimulant conditioned place preference, self-administration, and relapse. Next, we summarize behavioral and brain-mechanism results from studies using newer operant social-interaction procedures that inhibit opioid and psychostimulant self-administration and relapse. We conclude by discussing how the reviewed studies point to future directions for the addiction field and other neuroscience and psychiatric fields, and their implications for mechanistic understanding of addiction and development of new treatments.

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