Spring 2017
The American Society of Addiction Medicine defines addiction as, “a primary, chronic disease of brain reward, motivation, memory, and related circuitry.”
With the recent rise in opioid abuse and overdose, which has quickly become a national health epidemic, scientists are focused increasingly on understanding the science behind addiction and its effect on the brain, in hopes of finding new ways to treat and ultimately prevent the disease from occurring.
Kerry J. Ressler, MD ’97, PhD ’97, chief scientific officer at McLean Hospital and professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School, is pursuing groundbreaking research aimed at unraveling the intersections between childhood traumatization and substance use disorders, and their joint associations with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) outcomes. He and his team have interviewed nearly 10,000 patients living in impoverished communities about how trauma and stress affect their lives.
Within the last several decades, scientists have made significant progress in understanding the changes in brain function that occur with addiction. I’m hopeful this progress will soon translate into effective therapeutic and preventive strategies that ensure addiction is no longer a global epidemic.
Kerry J. Ressler
The rates of trauma exposure are very high. In fact, more than 90 percent of those interviewed have been exposed to trauma, such as child abuse and domestic violence, among other factors. His data suggests that a history of trauma and stress increases greatly one’s risk of addiction. Explains Ressler, “This work speaks to the broader problem of addiction as a biological disease. We all have innate drives toward food, sex, and other novelties, but when you begin to abuse drugs, these drives become hijacked so that the normal drives are not nearly as rewarding anymore.”
The Harvard Mahoney Neuroscience Institute hosts a
Since its founding in 1990, the Harvard Mahoney Neuroscience Institute has helped advance neuroscience at Harvard Medical School by promoting public awareness of the importance of brain research and by helping to fund research at the School’s Department of Neurobiology.