CCN Colloquium: "Oops I did it again.... TMS as a tool to improve sobriety and decrease drug and alcohol relapse through modulation of executive control and salience circuitry."

January 10, -
Speaker(s): Colleen Hanlon, Ph.D. (BrainsWay)
The struggle between desire and control is as old as human history. With the increasing sophistication of brain imaging techniques, we now have a biological fingerprint of the dueling neural networks that struggle to keep our cravings in-check and our has been described in art, religion, philosophy, and music for centuries. With the FDA-clearance of transcranial magnetic stimulation as the first neural-circuit based therapeutic for smoking cessation, there has been elevated interest in identifying novel brain targets and behavioral primes for improving NIBS addiction outcomes. While most o the research in the substance use disorders field has focused on the The medial prefrontal cortex (MPFC) is a promising target given its role in modulating cue-reactivity across substances and species. Additionally exposure to a salient drug cue or induction of a drug related memory appears to be important for optimizing treatment outcomes. This talk will review the results of the largest studies to date in the TMS for addiction field - highlighting milestones in smoking cessation, psychostimulants, and alcohol use disorder research - many of which have already received regulatory clearance in countries across the world.
Sponsor

Duke Institute for Brain Sciences (DIBS)

Co-Sponsor(s)

Center for Cognitive Neuroscience