PEREZ MARIELA FERNANDA
Capítulos de libros
Título:
NEW INSIGHTS IN GLUTAMATE-MEDIATED MECHANISMS UNDERLYING BENZODIAZEPINES DEPENDENCE AND COCAINE VULNERABILITY
Autor/es:
EMILCE ARTUR DE LA VILLARMOIS; LAURA GABACH; MARIELA F. PÉREZ; GARGIULO PASCUAL ANGEL; MESONES ARROYO HUMBERTO LUIS
Libro:
Psychiatry and Neuroscience: Bridging the Difference
Editorial:
Springer
Referencias:
Año: 2014; p. 100 - 134
Resumen:
It has been described that development and persistent expression of addictive behaviors occur through the usurpation of natural learning and memory mechanisms within the limbic system. Hippocampus (HP) and medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) have been implicated in the neuropathological mechanisms of drug addiction and withdrawal. In cocaine-abstinent human addicts and rats in similar conditions, neuronal activity of the mPFC is increased in response to cocaine re-exposure or drug-associated cues as well as hippocampal synaptic plasticity was increased after both, cocaine and diazepam repeated exposure in rats. Nitric oxide (NO), a diffusible neuromodulator synthesized in brain primarily by glutamatergic receptors activation, may play a role in initiating and maintaining behavioral effects of psychostimulants, and also in modulation of neuronal excitability and synaptic plasticity in different brain structures including the HP and mPFC. In this chapter we discuss some of the molecular and functional changes within the HP and mPFC induced by repeated cocaine or diazepam administration and the pharmacological and methodological strategies used to prevent or reverse diazepam dependence and cocaine vulnerability, such as interfere with NO signaling, hippocampal plasticity or alter environmental cues related to withdrawal symptoms experience. The mechanisms and strategies presented can be explored as possible targets for development of new therapeutics agents to treat dependence and addiction to psychoactive drugs.