As per the study, which was base on cocaine-seeking in rats, discover that inhibiting certain acetylcholine receptors made it more difficult to resist cocaine-seeking urges.
These receptors are locate in the lateral habenula (LHb), a region of the brain that balances reward and aversion.
This study was carry out by the National Institutes of Health under the National Institute on Drug Abuse, which fund the research.
The discovery is of particular importance as currently there are no authorise medicines to treat cocaine-abuse disorders.
Identifying these receptors and their functionality could allow them to be used as “future targets for the creation of cocaine use disorder treatments,” a statement by the National Institute on Drug Abuse said.
The lateral habenula (LHb) of the brain that has these receptors acts as an interface between the regions “mediating emotion and reward and those involved with reasoning and other higher-order thought processes.”
This is of particular importance as the said regions play a part in substance use disorders and major depressive disorders.
These factors make the LHb an area of particular interest for addiction science researchers.
The study has been publish in the Journal Of Neuroscience.
Nora Volkow, Director of NIDA, Said :
Carl Lupica, chief of the Electrophysiology Research Section of the Computational and Systems Neuroscience Branch of NIDA, said that while the immediate results of this study are relate to cocaine seeking, the study will have greater implications for impulsivity related to other drugs as well, Moreover, it can also have an impact on research relate to psychiatric conditions like obsessive-compulsive disorder.
Carl Lupica Said :