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.
» More ways to bookmark this page
|
Recently @ DoseNation
|
|
The comments posted here do not reflect the views of the owners of this site.