Showing posts with label post traumatic stress disorder. Show all posts
Showing posts with label post traumatic stress disorder. Show all posts

Thursday, April 25, 2013

Nature, Nurture, and Me


Which came first, the addiction or the trauma?

About a year ago, Jonathan Taylor, a professor at California State University in Fullerton, assigned his students some reading from my book, The Chemical Carousel, for his “Drugs, Politics, and Cultural Change” course. At the same time, the class watched an interview with Dr. Gabor Maté, author of In the Realm of Hungry Ghosts: Close Encounters with Addiction. In a letter written for his readers, Dr. Mate´ insists that addiction “is very close to the core of the human experience. That is why almost anything can become addictive, from seemingly healthy activities such as eating or exercising to abusing drugs intended for healing. The issue is not the external target but our internal relationship to it. Addictions, for the most part, develop in a compulsive attempt to ease one’s pain or distress in the world…. The more we suffer, and the earlier in life we suffer, the more we are prone to become addicted."

I find this perspective interesting, because I agree with so little of it. I do not believe that almost anybody can become involved in an addictive relationship with almost anything—not unless they have the genes for it. I do not believe that the genuine heart of addiction, its true root cause, is childhood abuse—although that is frequently and tragically a component of addiction, for many reasons. Overall, I see addiction as a biochemical disorder with strong behavioral attributes, mostly genetic in origin, influenced by—but not hostage to—environmental impacts, making it not so different from, say, diabetes or depression.

No doubt about it, there is a fair amount of distance between the doctor and your humble science journalist, from the nature/nurture point of view. And, students being students, they picked up on this, and wanted an explanation that would make some sense of these two seemingly opposite positions. Professor Taylor threw the question back to me:

My class was wondering how one would reconcile your and Mate’s views.  Both of you discuss the addicted brain and clearly view addiction as a brain disorder.  The fundamental difference is that Mate disputes the genetic component of addiction, or at least he says there is some genetic component but that the majority of the brain dysfunction and low levels of neurotransmitters found in addicted individuals relates to environmental influences during early childhood (or in the womb), rather than a genetic component…. In the book he discusses studies that indicate that insufficient maternal care, exposure to conflict etc. all lead to improper brain development which leads to increase susceptibility to addiction.  So while you write about “inherited susceptibility,” he seems to favor an “environmental induced susceptibility…. Any elucidation I can share with my students would be helpful.

So. I was well and truly on the hook. I kept my response short, for the obvious reasons, but there is no getting around the fact that it’s a damn good question. Here’s what I ended up telling the class:

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Jon:

"Your students ask, quite rightly, how to reconcile the views expressed in The Chemical Carousel and In the Realm of Hungry Ghosts. Or, nature vs. nurture. Dr. Maté looks to environmental impacts during early childhood as the addiction trigger, while I advocate a view of addiction as a genetic disorder, expressed because of changes in DNA, not bad mothering. (It wasn’t very long ago that schizophrenia was firmly believed to be a result of bad mothering, too!) More to the point, Maté believes, for example, that ALL female heroin addicts were sexually abused as children. That is certainly not an assertion widely agreed upon or well supported by the scientific literature. In the most recent population study of addicts and non-addicted siblings, published in Science (Feb. 3 2012), when the researchers looked at the early lives of sibling pairs, they found all the same risk factors: both the addicts and their siblings had seen roughly equal amounts of trauma in childhood. 'We really looked at their childhoods,' says Karen Ersche, lead author of the study and group leader for human addiction research at the University of Cambridge in England, quoted at Time Healthland. 'There was a lot of domestic violence, there was sexual abuse — but both [groups] had that.'

"So, which came first, the trauma, or the trauma-prone personality? Where Dr. Maté sees childhood trauma, I tend to see behavioral dysregulation. Children born with an addictive propensity also carry with them the potential for various kinds of behavioral problems, impulsivity being a common one. And it is entirely likely that most addicts have had rocky childhoods, since, quite often, they have had alcoholics in the nuclear family, with all the attendant problems, including sexual violence. Or, their own behavioral template leads to problems—angst, worry, fights, trauma. In a sense, we can say that sooner or later, something, or someone, or a series of environmental impacts, will traumatize a child with addictive propensities, in the same way that latent schizophrenia is “switched on” by a traumatic or highly emotional event. Addicts feel like outsiders from an early age, and many of them sense that something is not quite right with them, long before they ever take a drink or a drug.

"Sorting out this chicken-egg problem is a major headache. And we haven’t even discussed the possibility of trauma in the womb. But I am willing to say that none of this is as settled or as straightforward as Dr. Maté would have it. On the matter of nature/nurture, I’m willing to put the odds of that mix at 60/40, which is a good deal less genetically loaded than my estimates used to be. The growing research field of epigenetics has brought the two views closer together by demonstrating that a person’s DNA can in some cases be modified, and genes turned off and on, by environmental impacts.

"Overall, it’s safe to say that Dr. Maté and I do agree on this: One of the best defenses against the scourge of addictive disease is a stable, loving, empathetic family."

Best,
Dirk

Photo Credit: http://lofalexandria.blogspot.com/

Sunday, December 18, 2011

Heavy Drinking Impairs Serotonin Function More Rapidly in Women


My article on women and alcohol.

There are very real gender differences in the way men and women are affected by alcohol. Here's my summary of the subject in a December 16 article for Scientific American Online:

"Women's Response to Alcohol Suggests Need for Gender-Specific Treatment Programs"

A new study underscores that the physical consequences of alcoholism appear faster and are more severe for women than for men...

Article continues HERE.

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Is Post-Traumatic Stress Medication a Danger to Veterans?


I have not run any guest posts lately, but some months ago the AllTreatment site was kind enough to feature a guest post of my own, so I've arranged to return the favor with an article by Brandon Yu. He is a Managing Editor of Alltreatment.com. AllTreatment is an online rehab center directory and substance abuse information resource.‬

Opinions expressed in guest posts are not necessarily those of Addiction Inbox.
-----
By Brandon Yu

After spending weeks, months, or years on the battlefield, veterans often experience Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) when returning to civilian life. The Department of Veteran Affairs reports that 60% of men and 50% of women, not just veterans, experience some sort of trauma in their lifetimes. PTSD has been known to cause insomnia, depression, and a sense of detachment, making it difficult for veterans to readjust to society, and throwing their personal and professional lives into disarray.

While there may not be a cure for Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, there are treatments, and certainly medication, to sooth its side-effects. The most popular medication for PTSD is the pharmaceutical Quetiapine, marketed as Seroquel by the biologics company AstraZeneca. A potent antipsychotic, Seroquel is often prescribed to treat symptoms of psychoses including schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, and acute manic episodes; numerous physicians claim that it is one of the few treatments that curbs the nightmares, insomnia and anxiety that come with PTSD. It is not considered a controlled substance, and not deemed addictive like other sleeping pills.

However, several families of veterans are calling for a Congressional investigation of Seroquel after reports of mistreatment over the drug have arisen. After some complaints that the treatment was not working, some doctors prescribed progressively larger doses for given patients, with certain ones receiving more than double the maximum recommended. Though only six similar deaths have been noted, there is a belief that there have been others. The New England Journal of Medicine recently published a report linking Seroquel use to heart failure, noting that 3 of 1,000 patients who suffered from cardiac arrest were noted to be on Seroquel at the time of death.

Seroquel is one of the more common medications in America, as it is one of the Department of Veterans Affairs’ most prescribed drugs and the fifth best-selling drug in the nation. It has been reported to help schizophrenia and PTSD, but some of its side effects, such as diabetes, weight gain, and uncontrollable muscle spasms, have caused AstraZeneca to receive multiple trips to court, with an estimated 10,000 product liability lawsuits. It is noted that although it is commonly prescribed for those suffering PTSD, Seroquel has not received FDA approval as proper treatment for insomnia. Families of veterans who are attempting a Congressional investigation on Seroquel are hoping for a clearer guideline of the side effects as well as the risk to one’s health.
Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...