I'm having a hard time believing this study and the results..
Using this logic, you could take someone tolerant to heroin, shoot them up with their normal dose while they're sleeping and they would overdose at the same rate as someone who has never taken heroin in their life.
Alternatively, someone who has chronic amnesia could take a tiny dose of heroin every day and never become tolerant.
Can someone please explain to me the physiological response that these "predrug cues" exhibit in an animal, that makes them physiologically naive to drugs, simply by making them believe that they won't be taking drugs? Dog salivating to the sound of a bell I get, but this seems like a bunch of 'mind over matter' bullshit.
A particularly dramatic demonstration of the important role of Pavlovian conditioning to opiate tolerance was reported by Dr. Shepard Siegel and colleagues at McMaster University (Siege t al, 198x). Rats were prepared with chronic indwelling catheters that allowed for intravenous infusions of heroin. Rats were infused with heroin whenever they were in the context of a particular set of "predrug" cues, while on other occasions they were infused with saline in the presence of a different set of cues. The dose of heroin was systematically increased to mimic how heroin addicts increase their dose as tolerance develops. There was also a group of rats that did not receive any heroin during this initial phase of the study. These rats received saline infusion with both sets of cues and were desigtned to serve as drug naive controls for the final test. In the final test, all rats were given a large dose of heroin. Half of all the rats received this "overdose" with the predrug cues and half with the different set of cues. As expected, most of the drug naive control rats died from the large dose and the death rate was equal in the two sets of cues for the control rats. Among the drug experienced rats, there was a dramatic difference in the number of overdose deaths depending on where the overdose was administered. When the overdose was administered with the usual predrug cues, very few animals died- it appeared that these animals were tolerant and were able to survive. However, those drug experienced animals given the large dose without the usual predrug cues succumbed to the lethal effects at about the same rate as the naive control animals. Removing the usual predrug cues seemed to remove tolerance, as predicted by the Pavlovian conditioning model of tolerance.
Riley Hinson - 2012
Using this logic, you could take someone tolerant to heroin, shoot them up with their normal dose while they're sleeping and they would overdose at the same rate as someone who has never taken heroin in their life.
Alternatively, someone who has chronic amnesia could take a tiny dose of heroin every day and never become tolerant.
Can someone please explain to me the physiological response that these "predrug cues" exhibit in an animal, that makes them physiologically naive to drugs, simply by making them believe that they won't be taking drugs? Dog salivating to the sound of a bell I get, but this seems like a bunch of 'mind over matter' bullshit.
