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Invisibleveggie

Registered: 07/26/04
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Safety Concerns Raised Over Popular Wakefulness Drug
    #9989985 - 03/17/09 06:42 PM (4 years, 2 months ago)

Safety Concerns Raised Over Popular Wakefulness Drug
March 17, 2009 - Time

If ever there was a safe recreational drug, modafinil seemed to be it. The greatest little pick-me-up since the cup of joe — or so its enthusiasts said — the anti-narcolepsy medication has also helped recreational and casual users stay peppy without the benefit of sleep. As for addiction? Not to worry. The drugs that hook you most powerfully do their work by mucking about with the pleasure-inducing brain chemical dopamine, but modafinil doesn't go there. "Modafinil," as Slate Magazine claimed in a 2003 posting on the drug, "tiptoes around dopamine."

That was the thinking at least — but the thinking now turns out to be wrong, according to a new study published March 17 in the Journal of the American Medical Association. The authors say modafinil is not only the latest in a long line of chemical stimulants designed to keep users awake, alert and happy; it's also the latest to go straight to the brain's addiction centers in the process.

"This drug is not safe to use the way people are using it," says Dr. Nora Volkow, the head of the National Institute on Drug Abuse and co-author of the new study. "Not safe at all."

But modafinil, in many ways, is a very good thing. It was first marketed for treating narcoleptic sleep disorders in 1998, but doctors soon began prescribing it off-label to control attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and even the symptoms of schizophrenia. What starts off medicinal, however, often goes recreational, and modafinil soon developed a following among people (students, writers and others) who wanted alertness in a pill, either to become more productive or simply to have more fun.

The problem was, no one was entirely sure how modafinil worked. And that, coupled with the fact that it had not yet shown the powerful addictive potential of, say, crystal meth or cocaine, led to the assumption that it was the rare stimulant that left dopamine alone. That idea simply didn't sound believable to Volkow and her collaborator, chemist Johanna Fowler.

The researchers thus recruited a small sample group of 10 men, ages 23 to 46; some of them got a placebo, while others took either 200 mg or 400 mg (typical therapeutic doses) of modafinil. All of the men's brains were then scanned using positron emission tomography (PET scans). Volkow and Fowler were looking for dopamine activity — not just for overall dopamine levels, but also the behavior of dopamine transporters.

"Dopamine transporters perform clean-up work," says Volkow. "They remove dopamine after it's released and recycle it." The more dopamine that gets left in the spaces between cells, the longer its rewarding effect on the brain — and the likelier it is to lay down the roots of addiction. As Volker and Fowler suspected, the PET scans of the men who had taken modafinil showed that dopamine transporters were indeed being blocked by the drug and overall levels were rising.

"Cocaine, amphetamines and methamphetamine all block dopamine transporters and leave dopamine in the extracellular areas," says Volkow. "Modafinil does the same."

Worse, the drug does not do its work indiscriminately. Modafinil binds to the same site on dopamine transporters as cocaine does, and one of the areas of the brain in which dopamine levels then begin to climb is the nucleus accumbens — a spot that researchers have come to recognize as a sort of addiction central for recreational meds. "The nucleus accumbens," Volkow and Fowler wrote, is a "brain region critical for the rewarding effects of drugs of abuse."

If there is anything that has so far prevented modafinil from becoming as widely abused — and as highly addictive — as some drugs, it's that it appears to lack the one-two punch of many other stimulants. Amphetamines, for example, don't just block the clean-up function of the dopamine transporters but actually boost overall dopamine output at the same time. That's a little like discontinuing your trash pick-up at the same time you double the amount you're throwing away. Modafinil stops at step one — canceling the garbage trucks.

Either way, you're going to make a mess, and surprisingly fast. Volkow points out that even without increasing dopamine output, modafinil blocks the re-uptake of more than half of the amount the brain naturally releases. "This completely negates the argument that modafinil has no dopaminergenic effect," she says. "It does have the drug signature required to produce addiction." The safe party drug, once again, is not nearly as safe as it seems.


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Offlinesupernovasky
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Re: Safety Concerns Raised Over Popular Wakefulness Drug [Re: veggie]
    #9990062 - 03/17/09 06:53 PM (4 years, 2 months ago)

lol. This is an incredibly dumb story. I have done modifinil before, as have several of my friends. It is as far from addictive as possible. I'm serious, it produces NO pleasure feelings, just a sense of being awake and alert. It is QUITE easy to take it, wait a long time, take it again a few times (or several), abstain for as long as you want, etc. Its potential for abuse is extremely low. Seriously. I've got like, 10 sitting in my closet right now with no urge to down any of them, as I don't need to. It doesn't feel like your drugged up either.

In fact, I'd say this proves that the spot they are looking at is NOT the "addiction center" of the brain because of this drug.

I think this is just an attempt to move it to the same schedule as adderall and hydrocodone.


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Invisibleveggie

Registered: 07/26/04
Posts: 13,985
Loc: Flag
Re: Safety Concerns Raised Over Popular Wakefulness Drug [Re: supernovasky]
    #9990133 - 03/17/09 07:10 PM (4 years, 2 months ago)

Both Modafinil and Adrafinil have been used safely for about 10 years, without any reports of addiction.

I'm sure their PET scans produced some pretty pictures, but I think it shows that our understanding of what causes addiction is all wrong.

Every year the pharmaceutical companies produce new highly addictive and dangerous drugs. It seems that only when the press finds it to be a so called 'party drug' does a red flag go up, even if it has been safely used for years.


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Offlinelumibles
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Registered: 04/23/08
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Re: Safety Concerns Raised Over Popular Wakefulness Drug [Re: veggie]
    #9992124 - 03/18/09 12:21 AM (4 years, 2 months ago)

These type of news stories simply encourage me to do more research and possibly end up taking the drug. Thanks news!


--------------------
Reality is a crutch for people who can't cope with drugs.  ~Lily Tomlin

Did you know America ranks the lowest in education but the highest in drug use?  It's nice to be number one, but we can fix that.  All we need to do is start the war on education.  If it's anywhere near as successful as our war on drugs, in no time we'll all be hooked on phonics.  ~Leighann Lord


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