malakaix
Bluelighter
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I'm not sure if this question belongs in ADD.. feel free to move it to the appropriate forum as it does discuss theoretical ideas. 
I've recently been reading a Bio-psychology book written by John P.J Pinel Chapter 15 Outline in which under Chapter 15/Drug Abuse and Reward Circuits in the Brain he mentions the study of 'Situational specificity of drug tolerance'
He begins explaining initially about a study conducted on rats by (Crowell, Hinson & Shepard Siegel, 1981)
Note: I apologize in advance to anyone who reads this entire post in regards to the length of it, but i felt it was necessary to quote certain parts of the book, because of the nature of the question/topic.
So this extract sets the scene for what im trying to explain, it's further highlighted in relation to human studies involving addicts and tolerance.
The next extract is the main part of my question that i want to convey across:
[Quote="Extract from Chapter 15 'Hypothesis']
The numerous demonstrations of the situational specificity of drug tolerance led Siegel and his colleagues to propose that addicts may be particularly susceptible to the lethal effects of a drug overdose when the drug is administered in a new context. Their hypothesis is that addicts become tolerance when they repeatedly self-administer their drug in the same environments, and as a result, they begin taking larger and larger doses to counteract the diminution of drug effects. Then, when the addict administers her or his usual massive dose in an unusual situation, tolerance effects are not present to counteract the effects of the drug, and there is a greater risk of death from overdose. In support of this hypothesis, Siegel, Hinson, Krank, and McCulley (1982) found that 96% of a group of heroin-tolerant rats died following a high dose of heroin administered in a novel environment, but only 64% died following the same dose administered in there usual injection environment. Heroin kills by suppressing respiration.[/Quote]
This next extract is of the most interest, because it outlines the theory as to why this reduction is likely to occur.
[Quote="Extract from Chapter 15 'Explanation']
Of the several noteworthy theories that have been proposed to account for the situational specificity of drug tolerance (see Baker & Tiffany, 1985; Eikelbomm & Stewart, 1982; Paletta & Wagner, 1986), Siegel's theory has been most influential. Siegel views each incidence of drug administration as a Pavlovian conditioning trial in which various environmental stimuli that regularly predict the administration of the drug (e.g pubs, washrooms, needles, other addicts) are conditional stimuli, and the drug effects are unconditional stimuli. The central assumption of the theory is that conditional stimuli that predict drug administration come to elicit conditional responses opposite to the unconditional effects of the drug. Siegel has termed these hypothetical opposing conditional responses conditioned compensatory responses. The theory is that as the stimuli that repeatedly predict the effects of a drug come to elicit greater and greater conditioned compensatory responses, they increasingly counteract the unconditional effects of the drug and produce situationally specific tolerance.[/Quote]
I understand this is theoretical, but i found it rather interesting.. and thought maybe i could get a more knowledgeable opinion on the matter, other then my own interpretation of what i've read.
What do you guys think? Has anyone heard of this theory before, i researched it a bit and found a few articles mentioning it.
Or may be im just slow to catch on to what a lot of people already know
I've recently been reading a Bio-psychology book written by John P.J Pinel Chapter 15 Outline in which under Chapter 15/Drug Abuse and Reward Circuits in the Brain he mentions the study of 'Situational specificity of drug tolerance'
He begins explaining initially about a study conducted on rats by (Crowell, Hinson & Shepard Siegel, 1981)
Note: I apologize in advance to anyone who reads this entire post in regards to the length of it, but i felt it was necessary to quote certain parts of the book, because of the nature of the question/topic.
Extract from Chapter 15 'Study' said:In one study, two groups of rats received 20 alcohol and 20 saline injections in an alternating sequence, one injection every other day. The only difference between the two groups was that the rats in one group received all 20 alcohol injections in a distinctive test room and the 20 saline injections in there colony room, while the rats in the other group received the alcohol in the colony room and the saline in the distinctive test room. Then the tolerance of all rats to the hypo-thermic (temperature-reducing) effects of alcohol was assessed in both environments. Tolerance was observed only when the rats were injected in the environment that had previously been paired with alcohol administration. This situational specificaty of drug tolerance has been demonstrated in many other experiments involving a variety of drugs.
So this extract sets the scene for what im trying to explain, it's further highlighted in relation to human studies involving addicts and tolerance.
The next extract is the main part of my question that i want to convey across:
[Quote="Extract from Chapter 15 'Hypothesis']
The numerous demonstrations of the situational specificity of drug tolerance led Siegel and his colleagues to propose that addicts may be particularly susceptible to the lethal effects of a drug overdose when the drug is administered in a new context. Their hypothesis is that addicts become tolerance when they repeatedly self-administer their drug in the same environments, and as a result, they begin taking larger and larger doses to counteract the diminution of drug effects. Then, when the addict administers her or his usual massive dose in an unusual situation, tolerance effects are not present to counteract the effects of the drug, and there is a greater risk of death from overdose. In support of this hypothesis, Siegel, Hinson, Krank, and McCulley (1982) found that 96% of a group of heroin-tolerant rats died following a high dose of heroin administered in a novel environment, but only 64% died following the same dose administered in there usual injection environment. Heroin kills by suppressing respiration.[/Quote]
This next extract is of the most interest, because it outlines the theory as to why this reduction is likely to occur.
[Quote="Extract from Chapter 15 'Explanation']
Of the several noteworthy theories that have been proposed to account for the situational specificity of drug tolerance (see Baker & Tiffany, 1985; Eikelbomm & Stewart, 1982; Paletta & Wagner, 1986), Siegel's theory has been most influential. Siegel views each incidence of drug administration as a Pavlovian conditioning trial in which various environmental stimuli that regularly predict the administration of the drug (e.g pubs, washrooms, needles, other addicts) are conditional stimuli, and the drug effects are unconditional stimuli. The central assumption of the theory is that conditional stimuli that predict drug administration come to elicit conditional responses opposite to the unconditional effects of the drug. Siegel has termed these hypothetical opposing conditional responses conditioned compensatory responses. The theory is that as the stimuli that repeatedly predict the effects of a drug come to elicit greater and greater conditioned compensatory responses, they increasingly counteract the unconditional effects of the drug and produce situationally specific tolerance.[/Quote]
I understand this is theoretical, but i found it rather interesting.. and thought maybe i could get a more knowledgeable opinion on the matter, other then my own interpretation of what i've read.
What do you guys think? Has anyone heard of this theory before, i researched it a bit and found a few articles mentioning it.
Or may be im just slow to catch on to what a lot of people already know
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