Drug Dependence, Tolerance & Addiction
Neurobiology of the mesolimbic reward pathway, tolerance and withdrawal, and the stage-wise pharmacotherapy of substance use disorders
Past RGUHS + DNB + MPMSU + MUHS + VNSGU · 38
RGUHSMar '26
MPMSUMay '25
DNBJun '25
DNBJun '25
VNSGUJan '25
RGUHSJun '24
RGUHSJun '24
DNBMay '24
MPMSUJun '23
RGUHSNov '22
MPMSU2022
DNBDec '22
RGUHSNov '21
RGUHSJul '21
DNBDec '21
DNBJun '21
MUHSSummer '21
RGUHSMay '19
VNSGUMar '19
RGUHSNov '18
RGUHSNov '18
RGUHSNov '17
RGUHSJun '16
MPMSU2015
DNBDec '15
MUHSWinter '15
MPMSU2014
MUHSSummer '14
MPMSU2013
DNBDec '13
MPMSU2012
RGUHSMay '11
RGUHSMay '11
DNBDec '11
DNBDec '11
RGUHSMay '09
RGUHSSep '07
MPMSU2006
Introduction & terminology
- Dependence — an altered physiological state from repeated drug administration that requires continued drug presence to maintain equilibrium; cessation produces a characteristic withdrawal (abstinence) syndrome. Formerly "physical dependence"; reflects neuroadaptation. Typical of CNS depressants — opioids, alcohol, barbiturates, benzodiazepines.
- Addiction — a pattern of compulsive drug use in which procuring/using the drug takes precedence over all else and continues despite known harm. Formerly "psychological dependence." Dependence is not essential to addiction — amphetamines, cocaine, cannabis and LSD addict with little/no physical dependence.
- Substance use disorder (SUD) — the DSM-5 umbrella term that collapsed the old "abuse + dependence" split into one mild–moderate–severe continuum; diagnosis rests on a pathological behaviour pattern clustered into impaired control (incl. craving), social impairment, risky use and pharmacological criteria (tolerance, withdrawal).
- Reinforcement — a drug's capacity to produce effects that drive repeat use; the faster a drug acts, the more reinforcing it is — so IV/inhaled routes are most reinforcing. Opioids and cocaine are strong reinforcers; benzodiazepines weak.
- Drug abuse vs habituation — abuse = use deviating from approved medical/social norms (for regulators, any illicit-drug use); habituation = mild involvement with minimal withdrawal. KDT advises dropping "habituation" as a separate term — the difference from addiction is only quantitative.
- Tolerance, dependence and withdrawal are biological, not synonymous with addiction — a patient on correctly-dosed opioid or β-blocker shows tolerance/dependence/withdrawal without being addicted; prescribers must distinguish physiological dependence from SUD.
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Drug Dependence
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