Experimental medication helps treat cocaine addiction
Health A recently developed medication encourages people with cocaine use disorder to reduce their intake of the stimulant – a step towards the first approved drugs to treat the problem By Grace Wade Facebook / Meta Twitter / X icon Linkedin Reddit Email Crystals of cocaine viewed through a microscope ASTRID & HANNS-FRIEDER MICHLER/SCIENCE PHOTO
Health
A recently developed medication encourages people with cocaine use disorder to reduce their intake of the stimulant – a step towards the first approved drugs to treat the problem
By Grace Wade
Crystals of cocaine viewed through a microscope
ASTRID & HANNS-FRIEDER MICHLER/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY
An experimental medication targeting reward pathways in the brain helps people addicted to cocaine reduce their drug use – and could treat other substance use disorders, too.
Medications are available to treat alcoholism and opioid use disorder, but none are approved for addictions to stimulants such as cocaine and methamphetamine. These drugs contribute to roughly half of all overdose deaths in the US. “So this is a giant unmet medical need,” says Ricardo Dolmetsch, founder of Tempero Bio, a California-based pharmaceutical company.
Drugs like cocaine are highly addictive because…
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