Drug Abuse and Psychosis: New Insights into Drug- induced Psychosis

Authors
Ham, SujiKim, Tae KyooSooyoung ChungIm, Heh-In
Issue Date
2017-02
Publisher
KOREAN SOC BRAIN & NEURAL SCIENCE, KOREAN SOC NEURODEGENERATIVE DISEASE
Citation
EXPERIMENTAL NEUROBIOLOGY, v.26, no.1, pp.11 - 24
Abstract
Addictive drug use or prescribed medicine abuse can cause psychosis. Some representative symptoms frequently elicited by patients with psychosis are hallucination, anhedonia, and disrupted executive functions. These psychoses are categorized into three classifications of symptoms: positive, negative, and cognitive. The symptoms of DIP are not different from the symptoms of schizophrenia, and it is difficult to distinguish between them. Due to this ambiguity of distinction between the DIP and schizophrenia, the DIP animal model has been frequently used as the schizophrenia animal model. However, although the symptoms may be the same, its causes are clearly different in that DIP is acquired and schizophrenia is heritable. Therefore, in this review, we cover several DIP models such as of amphetamine, PCP/ketamine, scopolamine, and LSD, and then we also address three schizophrenia models through a genetic approach with a new perspective that distinguishes DIP from schizophrenia.
Keywords
ESCALATING DOSAGE SCHEDULE; PREPULSE INHIBITION; LATENT INHIBITION; PREFRONTAL CORTEX; GENE-EXPRESSION; WORKING-MEMORY; RECEPTOR HYPOFUNCTION; PYRAMIDAL NEURONS; INDUCED DEFICITS; ANIMAL-MODEL; ESCALATING DOSAGE SCHEDULE; PREPULSE INHIBITION; LATENT INHIBITION; PREFRONTAL CORTEX; GENE-EXPRESSION; WORKING-MEMORY; RECEPTOR HYPOFUNCTION; PYRAMIDAL NEURONS; INDUCED DEFICITS; ANIMAL-MODEL; drug abuse; psychosis; drug induced psychosis; schizophrenia; animal model
ISSN
1226-2560
URI
https://pubs.kist.re.kr/handle/201004/123139
DOI
10.5607/en.2017.26.1.11
Appears in Collections:
KIST Article > 2017
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