Cannabis Campaigners' Guide News Database result:


After you have finished reading this article you can click here to go back.

Innate cannabis chemical erases fears

Helen Pearson

Nature Science Update

Thursday 01 Aug 2002

---

Calming brain circuit could treat anxieties.

Brain chemicals similar to those in cannabis wipe out bad memories - and
could point to new drugs for severe anxiety.

The chemicals are called cannabinoids. Mice with faulty cannabinoids
can't forget traumatic events, Beat Lutz of the Max Planck Institute of
Psychiatry in Munich, Germany and his colleagues have found1. They
suggest that the chemicals wipe fearful memories from the brain.

Drugs that boost cannabinoids could help people who suffer post-
traumatic stress disorder, phobias and panic attacks, say the
researchers.

Its "a great new idea," says neuroscientist Pankaj Sah of the Australian
National University in Canberra: "It introduces a whole new target," for
such therapies, he says.

Phobics are often treated by gradually exposing them to the object of
their fear in a safe environment, to erase the bad association. Lutz
suggests that cannabinoid-enhancing drugs, taken at the same time as
this exposure, might aid memory clearance.

A joint is unlikely to do the trick: smoking floods the brain with
cannabis's active ingredient and produces other effects such as memory
changes and pain relief. More effective would be a drug that raised
levels of cannabinoids only in the brain's fear centre, the amygdala,
says Lutz.

Shock tactics

Lutz's team gave mice mild shocks while playing a loud tone, until the
animals froze at the noise alone. When the shocks stopped, mice normally
forgot the ordeal and stopped freezing in less than a week. Mice
genetically engineered to lack the receptors that bind to cannabinoids
were unable to forget within that time.

During memory erasure the amygdala is flooded with cannabinoids; these
dampen the action of nerve cells.

Lutz is now giving normal mice cannabinoid boosters to see if they
forget learnt fears more quickly.

Other brain chemicals are involved in erasing fear. Clinical trials are
planned for compounds that activate NMDA receptors in the amygdala,
which are also involved in erasing unpleasant memories.


References
Marsicano, G. et al. The endogenous cannabinoid system controls
extinction of aversive memories. Nature, 418, 530 - 534, (2002).


 

 

 

After you have finished reading this article you can click here to go back.




This page was created by the Cannabis Campaigners' Guide.
Feel free to link to this page!