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Drink, drugs and disruption: Memory manipulation for the treatment of addiction

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

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Authors

Milton, AL 

Abstract

Addiction is a complex disorder, and one characterised by the acquisition of maladaptive instrumental (drug-seeking and drug-taking) and pavlovian (cue-drug associations) memories. These memories markedly contribute to the long-term risk of relapse, so reduction of the impact of these memories on behaviour could potentially be an important addition to current therapies for addiction. Memory reconsolidation may provide such a target for disrupting well-consolidated pavlovian cue-drug memories following an extensive drug history. Reconsolidation can be disrupted either by administering amnestic drugs in conjunction with a memory reactivation session, or by updating the memory adaptively through the induction of 'superextinction'. More work is needed before these therapies are ready for translation to the clinic, but if found clinically effective memory manipulation promises a radical new way of treating addiction.

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Keywords

Journal Title

Current Opinion in Neurobiology

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0959-4388
1873-6882

Volume Title

23

Publisher

Elsevier
Sponsorship
This work was supported by a UK Medical Research Council Programme Grant (no. 1002231) and was conducted in the Behavioural and Clinical Neuroscience Institute, funded by a joint award from the Medical Research Council and the Wellcome Trust.