
Ritalin May Cause Changes In Brain’s Reward
Areas
Effects May Overlap With Those Of Cocaine
ScienceDaily (Feb. 5, 2009) — A
common treatment for attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder, prescribed
millions of times a year, may change the brain in the same ways that cocaine
does, a new study in mice suggests. Research from Rockefeller University shows
that methylphenidate, commonly known as Ritalin, causes physical changes in
neurons in reward regions of mouse brains. In some cases, the effects
overlapped with those of cocaine.
The study highlights the need for more research into methylphenidate’s
long-term effects on the brain, the researchers say.
The researchers, led by Yong Kim, senior research associate, and Paul
Greengard, Vincent Astor Professor and head of the Laboratory of Molecular and
Cellular Neuroscience, exposed mice to two weeks of daily injections of cocaine
or methylphenidate. They then examined reward areas of the brain for changes in
dendritic spine formation — related to the formation of synapses and the
communication between nerve cells — and the expression of a protein called
delta Fos B, which has been implicated in the long-term actions of addictive
drugs.
Both drugs increased dendritic spine formation and the expression of delta
Fos B; however, the precise patterns of their effects were distinct. They
differed in the types of spines affected, the cells that were affected and the
brain regions. In some cases there was overlap between the two drugs, and in
some cases methylphenidate produced greater effects than cocaine, for example,
on protein expression in certain regions. Both methylphenidate and cocaine are
in the class of drugs known as psychostimulants.
“Methylphenidate, which is thought to be a fairly innocuous compound, can
have structural and biochemical effects in some regions of the brain that can be
even greater than those of cocaine,” says Kim. “Further studies are needed
to determine the behavioral implications of these changes and to understand the
mechanisms by which these drugs affect synapse formation.”
Reference: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences: February 3, 2009
Adapted from materials provided by Rockefeller
University.
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