Addiction: A Public Health Global Pandemic
A special issue of International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health (ISSN 1660-4601). This special issue belongs to the section "Mental Health".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (24 March 2023) | Viewed by 47273
Special Issue Editors
Interests: addiction and substance abuse; neurology; aging and cognitive decline; nutrition; total health and new models of health care
2. Department of Psychiatry, Wright State University Boonshoft School of Medicine, Dayton, OH 45435, USA
3. Division of Addiction Research & Education, Center for Sports, Exercise, & Mental Health, Western University Health Sciences, Pomona, CA 91766, USA
4. Department of Molecular Biology, Adelson School of Medicine, Ariel University, Ariel, Israel
5. Division of Personalized Pain Therapy Research & Education, Center for Advanced Spine Care of Southern Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85712, USA
6. The Kenneth Blum Behavioral & Neurogenetic Institute, LLC., Austin, TX 78701, USA
Interests: addiction research; personalized medicine; genetic factors influencing addiction and behavioral disorders employing nutrigenomics and epigenetics; addiction recovery; pain therapy; mental health
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Interests: psychostimulant addiction and toxicity; molecular neuropsychiatry
Interests: ADHD; concussion in sports; global mental health literacy; neuroimaging of concussion; depression education community health; role of mental health in primary carebal mental health literacy; role of mental health in primary care
Interests: translational addiction neuroscience
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
An ongoing controversy concerning addiction relates to the concept of abuse being either a moral choice (free will) initially to use in the absence of genetic antecedents (determinism) or that the opposite is true. Drug abuse, a major public health pandemic escalating amongst COVID strains, might be more likely because of a pre-existing propensity or vulnerability. However, these psychoactive drugs and possibly even unwanted addictive behaviors may also be the causative agent inducing a vulnerability. Thus, proponents of controlled drinking after the development of an alcohol use disorder would have to agree that, at least based on epigenetic insults induced by various drugs of abuse, there is an impact on normal reward processing, causing a disruption in neurotransmitter brain circuitry function. The public health field needs to be properly informed on a molecular and clinical scientific basis. Currently, there are a number of professionals that seem to believe that drug and aberrant behavioral addiction seeking is not grounded in behavioral and neurogenetic correlations. Naturally, these same proponents do not generally call for controlled methamphetamine use as it is clear that binges and other use can be neurotoxic.
Our proposed Special Issue will help provide important answers to the co-morbidity issue in psychiatry. These known insults to the brain cause changes that make abstinence less likely and ultimately lead to the escalation and requirement to increase drug usage in the face of tolerance and withdrawal symptomatology. The neuroscience, psychiatry, and neurology community agree that epigenetic insults residing in the environment either positively (deacetylation) or negatively (methylation) induce an unwanted state, affecting gene expression (up or down) due to mRNA transcription errors targeted to specific reward genes. The field needs a change in thinking and renovation of appropriate understanding of “dopamine homeostasis”, treating the cause not the symptoms. There is emerging evidence related to locus-specific neuro-epigenetic editing, which is a promising method for determining the causal epigenetic molecular mechanisms that drive an addicted state. Understanding this important reasoning will increase the field’s ability to establish the precise epigenetic mechanisms underlying drug addiction, and thus could lead to novel treatments and prophylaxis for addictive disorders. We have invited the cream of the crop in our proposal and successful execution will provide the entire environmental public health field with a treasure.
Dr. Eric R. Braverman
Prof. Dr. Kenneth Blum
Prof. Dr. J. L. Cadet
Dr. David Baron
Dr. Mark S. Gold
Guest Editors
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