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News (Media Awareness Project) - UK: Drug Eases Cocaine Cravings
Title:UK: Drug Eases Cocaine Cravings
Published On:1999-07-23
Source:Orange County Register (CA)
Fetched On:2008-09-06 01:36:03
DRUG EASES COCAINE CRAVINGS

Research: Scientists say BP 897 may help addicts break the habit by reducing
their desire for the substance.

European scientists have developed a drug that uses a promising new
approach to ease cravings for cocaine in addicted rats.

BP 897 is the first drug to target the "conditioning" effect of
cocaine, or the way, for example, that the mere sight of a street
corner where the addict used to buy cocaine can evoke a craving, said
Maria Pilla, the psychologist who led the study at the University of
Cambridge in England.

The only other drugs available either mimic cocaine so much that they
themselves can become addictive, or block its effects so well that
addicts overload on cocaine to deal with the pangs of withdrawal.

Whether BP 897 works in humans remains to be seen. Fullscale tests
could begin as early as next year.

The study was published in today's issue of the journal
Nature.

BP 897 eases the cravings associated with cocaine withdrawal by mildly
stimulating the brain while regulating levels of dopamine, a brain
chemical that can create intense pangs for the narcotic.

Cocaine is particularly hard to kick because of its ability to
"condition" users and evoke cravings the way an old song or a whiff of
perfume can trigger a flood of memories.

Pilla and her colleagues reported that BP 897 helped rats addicted to
cocaine break away from the effects of conditioning.

The researchers first trained rats to give themselves cocaine through
a catheter by pulling a lever. A light was rigged to go on every time
the rats did this, conditioning them to associate the light with the
high.

Later, the rats were taken off the cocaine. When researchers continued
to turn the light on, the rats were reminded of the drug and pulled
the lever.

"The rat is probably going through an intense craving at this point,"
said Pierre Sokoloff, a French researcher who worked on the project at
the National Institute for Health and Medical Research in Paris. "This
is a state that simulates withdrawal."

But once scientists gave them BP 897, the rats sought cocaine only
half as much as before.

Although it hasn't been tested with other addictive drugs, BP 897
might also be effective in treating heroin or tobacco addiction
because they also condition addicts, said Jonathan Druhan, an expert
in drug addiction at the University of Pennsylvania.
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