Abstract

Abstract Intracranial drug injections are useful in localizing brain areas where drugs of abuse initiate their habit‐forming actions. However, serious methodological problems accompany such studies. Pharmacological controls are necessary to assess non‐receptor‐mediated local actions of the drug, anatomical controls are necessary to rule out drug efflux to distal sites of action, and behavioral controls are necessary to separate rewarding from general activating effects of drugs. Five brain sites have been advanced as sites of rewarding opiate actions: the ventral tegmental area (VTA), nucleus accumbens septi (NAS), lateral hypothalamus, periaqueductal gray, and hippocampus. Current evidence appears to confirm two of these—VTA and NAS; evidence is currently incomplete in the case of the hippocampus and is conflicting in the case of the lateral hypothalamus and periaqueductal gray. Two sites have been advanced as sites of rewarding psychomotor stimulant actions: NAS and the frontal cortex; each site seems implicated, but puzzling differences between amphetamine and cocaine findings remain to be resolved. Each of the clearly implicated sites is local to dopamine cell bodies or dopamine terminals that have been implicated in the rewarding effects of brain stimulation, food, and sex.

Keywords

Ventral tegmental areaNucleus accumbensNeuroscienceDopaminePeriaqueductal grayBrain stimulation rewardAmphetamineLateral hypothalamusAddictionStimulantOlfactory tubercleOpiatePsychologyMedicineStimulationPharmacologyMidbrainCentral nervous systemReceptorInternal medicineDopaminergic

Affiliated Institutions

Related Publications

Publication Info

Year
1992
Type
review
Volume
10
Issue
3
Pages
247-263
Citations
274
Access
Closed

External Links

Social Impact

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

274
OpenAlex

Cite This

Roy A. Wise, Diane C. Hoffman (1992). Localization of drug reward mechanisms by intracranial injections. Synapse , 10 (3) , 247-263. https://doi.org/10.1002/syn.890100307

Identifiers

DOI
10.1002/syn.890100307