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Effects of Psychomotor Stimulants: A Closer Look at Methylphenidate Reward and Sensitization Amy Gancarz PSY 890 26 April 2007 www.psychoactive.org www.intervention.net
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Effects of Psychomotor Stimulants: A Closer Look at Methylphenidate Reward and Sensitization Amy Gancarz PSY 890 26 April 2007 .

Mar 26, 2015

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Page 1: Effects of Psychomotor Stimulants: A Closer Look at Methylphenidate Reward and Sensitization Amy Gancarz PSY 890 26 April 2007 .

Effects of Psychomotor Stimulants: A Closer Look at Methylphenidate

Reward and Sensitization

Amy Gancarz

PSY 890

26 April 2007www.psychoactive.org www.intervention.net

Page 2: Effects of Psychomotor Stimulants: A Closer Look at Methylphenidate Reward and Sensitization Amy Gancarz PSY 890 26 April 2007 .

Overview of drug class

• Psychomotor stimulants are compounds that can produce increases in psychological and physical functioning.

• Two primary groups in this drug class:– Naturally occurring cocaine

• Various forms

– synthetically produced amphetamine • Other analogues.

Page 3: Effects of Psychomotor Stimulants: A Closer Look at Methylphenidate Reward and Sensitization Amy Gancarz PSY 890 26 April 2007 .

Overview of Prototypic Drugs• Cocaine

– Botany

– History

– Current Usage

• Amphetamine– Origin/

– Clinical Uses

www.dea.gov/demand/speakout/03so.htm

www.lawbuzz.com/movies/blow/blow_story_ch4.htm www.umsl.edu

Page 4: Effects of Psychomotor Stimulants: A Closer Look at Methylphenidate Reward and Sensitization Amy Gancarz PSY 890 26 April 2007 .

Behavioral Affects

• Low to moderate doses– Induce wakefulness

– Increase activity

– Decrease appetite

– Stimulate the sympathetic nervous system

– Feelings of euphoria, well-being and self-confidence

• Higher doses– Produce stereotypic behaviors

• Brief and highly patterned behavior produced in repetitive manner.

– Psychosis• Vivid hallucinations

• Paranoid ideation

Page 5: Effects of Psychomotor Stimulants: A Closer Look at Methylphenidate Reward and Sensitization Amy Gancarz PSY 890 26 April 2007 .

Major Effects of Psychomotor Stimulants

• Sympathomimetrics– Broad range of autonomic NS activation in sympathetic division– Increases in cardiovascular function– Increased blood pressure– Increased body temperature– “side effect” of drug

• Effects of CNS– Decreased fatigue, increased alertness– Arousal– Elevated mood– euphoria

Page 6: Effects of Psychomotor Stimulants: A Closer Look at Methylphenidate Reward and Sensitization Amy Gancarz PSY 890 26 April 2007 .

Repeated Administration

• Tolerance– Most autonomic effects– Anorectic effects

• Sensitization– Rewarding effects– Enhances psychosis (AMPH)

Page 7: Effects of Psychomotor Stimulants: A Closer Look at Methylphenidate Reward and Sensitization Amy Gancarz PSY 890 26 April 2007 .

Mechanism of Action

• Psychomotor stimulants do not have true receptors in CNS– Cocaine

• binds to site on dopamine transporter (DAT)• Blocks monoamine reuptake into presynaptic

terminals

– AMPH and METH also bind to DAT• Block reuptake • Release monoamines from presynaptic

terminal• Inhibit action of monoamine oxidase (MAO)• May directly activate catecholamine receptor

• Produce effects by increasing synaptic activity of DA, NE and 5-HT

(Carroll et al. 1992)

Page 8: Effects of Psychomotor Stimulants: A Closer Look at Methylphenidate Reward and Sensitization Amy Gancarz PSY 890 26 April 2007 .

Psychomotor Stimulant Reinforcement

• Robust positive reinforcer– Effects mediated by mesolimbic/mesocortical DA neuronal

systems

• 6-OHDA lesions in mesolimbic/mesocortical pathway attenuate cocaine self-administration

www.addictionca.com

Page 9: Effects of Psychomotor Stimulants: A Closer Look at Methylphenidate Reward and Sensitization Amy Gancarz PSY 890 26 April 2007 .

Methylphenidate

Page 10: Effects of Psychomotor Stimulants: A Closer Look at Methylphenidate Reward and Sensitization Amy Gancarz PSY 890 26 April 2007 .

Methylphenidate Overview• First synthesized in 1940s

– Marketed as Ritalin in 1960s

• Schedule II since 1971

• Used for treatment of ADHD

• Exact mechanism of action unknown

• Metabolism occurs extracellularly– Ritalinic acid

• Excreted in the urine

http://www.methylphenidate.net/

Page 11: Effects of Psychomotor Stimulants: A Closer Look at Methylphenidate Reward and Sensitization Amy Gancarz PSY 890 26 April 2007 .

Methylphenidate Abuse

• Human self-administration intranasally – grinding tablets and sniffing the powder

• Rare cases:– Powder mixed in liquid and administered IV

• Risk of cardiac problems associated with contamination by non-active ingredients of oral tablets injected along with MPH

Page 12: Effects of Psychomotor Stimulants: A Closer Look at Methylphenidate Reward and Sensitization Amy Gancarz PSY 890 26 April 2007 .

Mechanism of MPH:

• Increases both DA and NE by blocking DAT and NE transporters

• Results in rapid increase in DA levels in cortical and subcortical brain regions (NAC)

Swanson & Volkow 2003

Page 13: Effects of Psychomotor Stimulants: A Closer Look at Methylphenidate Reward and Sensitization Amy Gancarz PSY 890 26 April 2007 .

CPP: IP MPH

Meririnne et al. 2001

Page 14: Effects of Psychomotor Stimulants: A Closer Look at Methylphenidate Reward and Sensitization Amy Gancarz PSY 890 26 April 2007 .

Sensitization to MPH Reward

Meririnne et al. 2001

Page 15: Effects of Psychomotor Stimulants: A Closer Look at Methylphenidate Reward and Sensitization Amy Gancarz PSY 890 26 April 2007 .

CPP: MPH,

SCH & RAC

Meririnne et al. 2001

Page 16: Effects of Psychomotor Stimulants: A Closer Look at Methylphenidate Reward and Sensitization Amy Gancarz PSY 890 26 April 2007 .

Effects of D1- and D2-Receptor Blockade on Sensitization to the Rewarding Properties of

MPH

Meririnne et al. 2001

Page 17: Effects of Psychomotor Stimulants: A Closer Look at Methylphenidate Reward and Sensitization Amy Gancarz PSY 890 26 April 2007 .

Other Controls

Meririnne et al. 2001

Page 18: Effects of Psychomotor Stimulants: A Closer Look at Methylphenidate Reward and Sensitization Amy Gancarz PSY 890 26 April 2007 .

CPP: IV MPH

Sellings et al. 2006

Page 19: Effects of Psychomotor Stimulants: A Closer Look at Methylphenidate Reward and Sensitization Amy Gancarz PSY 890 26 April 2007 .

CPP: MPH and DA Depletions and DA ANT

Sellings et al. 2006

Page 20: Effects of Psychomotor Stimulants: A Closer Look at Methylphenidate Reward and Sensitization Amy Gancarz PSY 890 26 April 2007 .

MPH Time course• Highest uptake of MPH occurred in basal ganglia• Temporal patterns of MPH different from Cocaine

– Entered brain rapidly • 8-10 minutes

– Slow rate of clearance• Approximately 90 minutes

• “High” induced does not correlate with time course of drug

Page 21: Effects of Psychomotor Stimulants: A Closer Look at Methylphenidate Reward and Sensitization Amy Gancarz PSY 890 26 April 2007 .

Clinical and illegal abuse

• Dose

• Pharmacokinetics

• Individual differences

• Context

Page 22: Effects of Psychomotor Stimulants: A Closer Look at Methylphenidate Reward and Sensitization Amy Gancarz PSY 890 26 April 2007 .

Bottom Line• Psychomotor stimulants reinforcing affects appear to be mediated by

Mesolimbic dopamine pathway via D1/D2 receptors

• Methylphenidate can produce conditioned place preference at higher doses, indicating it produces reinforcing affects similar to other prototypic psychomotor stimulants– D1 antagonists attenuate conditioned place preference – amOT DA depletion lesions attenuate conditioned place preference

• Blockade of >50% DAT necessary in order to produce feeling of being ‘high’

• Although Methylphenidate saturates receptors quicker than cocaine, the clearance from receptors is much slower making it more difficult to administer in short interval– Less likely to abuse

Page 23: Effects of Psychomotor Stimulants: A Closer Look at Methylphenidate Reward and Sensitization Amy Gancarz PSY 890 26 April 2007 .

References• Anderson, S.L., Arvanitogiannis, A., Pliakas, A.M., LeBlanc, C. and Carlexon, W.A. (2002). Altered responsiveness to cocaine in

rats exposed to methylphenidate during development. Nature Neuroscience. 5(1): 13-14.• Caine, S.B. and Koob, G.F. (1993). Modulation of cocaine self-administration in the rat through D-3 dopamine receptors. Science

260 (5115): 1814-1816.• Carroll, F.I., Lewin, A.H., Boja, J.W., Kuhar, M.J. (1992). Cocaine receptor: Biochemical characterization and structure-activity

relationships of cocaine analogues and the dopamine transporter. 35(6): 969-981.• Cornish, J.L. and Kalivas, P.W. (2001): Cocaine Sensitization and craving: Differing roles for dopamine and glutamate in the

nucleus accumbens. Journal of Addictive Diseases 20(3): 43- 54.• Johanson, C.E., Schuster, C.R. Psychopharmacology: The Fourth Generation of Progress. (2000). Cocaine and Chronic

Amphetamine Use and Abuse. www.acnp.org • Johanson, C.E. and Fischman, M.W. (1989). The Pharmacology of Cocaine related to its abuse. The American Society for

Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics. 41(1): 3-52.• Meririnne, E. (2002). Rewarding properties of psychomotor stimulants and morphine: Pharmacological modulation of their

conditioning or sensitization in rats. Academic Dissertation: 2-80.• Meririnne, E., Kankaanpaa, A., Seppala, T.(2001). Rewarding properties of methylphenidate: sensitization by prior exposure to

the drug and effects of dopamine D1- and D2 – receptor antagonists. Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics: 298(2): 539-550.

• Schenk, S. and Davidson, E.S. Stimulant Preexposure sensitizes rats and humans to the rewarding effects of cocaine. 56-82. • Sellings, L.H., McQuade, L.E., Clarke, P.B. (2006). Characterization of dopamine dependent rewarding and locomotor stimulant

effects of intravenously-administered methylphenidate in rats. Neuroscience 141: 1457-1468.• Swanson, J.D. & Volkow, N.D. (2003). Serum and brain concentrations of methylphenidate: Implications for use and abuse.

Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews 27(7): 615-621.• Wise, R.A. and Bozarth, M.A. (1987). A psychomotor stimulant theory of addiction. Psychological Review. 94(4): 469-492.Websites• www.nida.org• www.intervention.net• www.umsl.edu • www.druginfo.adf.org• www.psychoactive.org• www.addictionca.com• www.drugscope.ca.org• www.mla-hhss.org/gifs• www.ucimc.org/media/all• www.dea.gov/demand/speakout/03so.htm• http://health.howstuffworks.com/crack2.htm • www.historyhouse,com• www.stopaddiction.com• www.lawbuzz.com• www.methylphenidate.net

Page 24: Effects of Psychomotor Stimulants: A Closer Look at Methylphenidate Reward and Sensitization Amy Gancarz PSY 890 26 April 2007 .

Is MPH a weak stimulant compared to cocaine?

• Dose of IV MPH (0.075 mg/kg) required to block 50% of the DAT was about half the dose required for IV dose of cocaine (0.13 mg/kg)

• An iv dose of MPH (0.1mg/kg) that exceeded 60% DAT blockade reliably produced a reinforcing effect (‘high’)

Volkow et al. 2002

Page 25: Effects of Psychomotor Stimulants: A Closer Look at Methylphenidate Reward and Sensitization Amy Gancarz PSY 890 26 April 2007 .

Volkow 2003