Search for a command to run...
The theory is advanced that the common denominator of a wide range of addictive substances is their ability to cause psychomotor activation. This view is related to the theory that all positive reinforcers activate a common biological mechanism associated with approach behaviors and that this mechanism has as one of its components dopaminergic fibers that project up the medial forebrain bundle from the midbrain to limbic and cortical regions. Evidence is reviewed that links both the reinforcing and locomotor-stimulating effects of both the psychomotor stimulants and the opiates to this brain mechanism. It is suggested that nicotine, caffeine, barbiturates, alcohol, benzodiazepines, cannabis, and phencyclidine----each ofwhich also has psychomotor stimulant actions--may activate the docaminergic fibers or their output circuitry. The role of physical dependence in addiction is suggested to vary from drug to drug and to be of secondary importance in the understanding of compulsive drug self-administration. Attempts at a general theory of addiction are attempts to isr late--from a variety of irrelevant actionsmthose drug actions that are responsible for habitual, compulsive, nonmedical drug self-administration. The common assumption of addiction theorists is that general principles of addiction can be learned from the study of one drug and that these principles will have heuristic value for the study of other drugs. Thus far, attempts at a general theory of addiction have failed to isolate common actions that can account for addiction across the range of major drug classes. A major stumbling block has been the psychomotor stimulants--amph etamine and cocainemwhich do not readily fit models traditionally based on depressant drug classes. The present article offers a new attempt at a general theory of addiction. It differs from earlier theories (e.g., Collier, 1968; Himmelsbach, 1943; Jaffe & Sharpless, 1968; Jellinek, 1960; Kalant, 1977; Lindsmith, 1947; Solomon & Corbit, 1974) in that it is based on the common denominator of the psychomotor stimulants---amphetamine, cocaine, and related drugs---rather than on the common denominator of the socalled depressant drugs~opiates, barbiturates, alcohol, and others. We take up two topics before presenting the new theory. First, we briefly discuss the heuristic value of a biological approach and suggest that the biologist's distinction between homology and analogy offers a useful insight. Next we discuss the shortcomings of earlier theories--variants of dependence theory. Then we outline the new theory and review the relevant evidence for its three major assertions: (a) that all addictive drugs have psychomotor stimulant actions, (b) that the stimulant actions of these different drugs have a shared biological mechanism, and (c) that the biological mechanism of these stimulant