ININFA   02677
INSTITUTO DE INVESTIGACIONES FARMACOLOGICAS
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Stress, sex, and addiction: potential roles of corticotropin-releasing factor, oxytocin, and arginine-vasopressin
Autor/es:
V. BISAGNO; J. L. CADET
Revista:
BEHAVIOURAL PHARMACOLOGY
Editorial:
LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
Referencias:
Lugar: Philadelphia; Año: 2014 p. 1 - 13
ISSN:
0955-8810
Resumen:
Stress sensitivity and sex are predictive factors for the
development of neuropsychiatric disorders. Life stresses
are not only risk factors for the development of addiction but
also are triggers for relapse to drug use. Therefore, it is
imperative to elucidate the molecular mechanisms
underlying the interactions between stress and drug abuse,
as an understanding of this may help in the development of
novel and more effective therapeutic approaches to block
the clinical manifestations of drug addiction. The
development and clinical course of addiction-related
disorders do appear to involve neuroadaptations within
neurocircuitries that modulate stress responses and are
influenced by several neuropeptides. These include
corticotropin-releasing factor, the prototypic member of this
class, as well as oxytocin and arginine-vasopressin that play
important roles in affiliative behaviors. Interestingly, these
peptides function to balance emotional behavior, with
sexual dimorphism in the oxytocin/arginine-vasopressin
systems, a fact that might play an important role in the
differential responses of women and men to stressful
stimuli and the specific sex-based prevalence of certain
addictive disorders. Thus, this review aims to summarize (i)
the contribution of sex differences to the function of
dopamine systems, and (ii) the behavioral, neurochemical,
and anatomical changes in brain stress
systems.