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Brainstorming: The Science and Politics of Opiate Research
  
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Brainstorming: The Science and Politics of Opiate Research [Hardcover]

Solomon Snyder (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)


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Book Description

September 9, 1989

The discovery of how opiates such as morphine and heroin relieve pain and produce euphoria is one of the most dramatic tales of modern science. It begins in 1971 when, at the height of the undeclared war in Vietnam, Richard Nixon officially announced a war on drugs. Heroin addiction--no longer confined to urban ghettos--was causing bad public relations for the White House. The specter of young American soldiers demoralized, drugged, and committing atrocities was not the image President Nixon wished to convey as he argued for further bombings of North Vietnam.

In this book Solomon Snyder describes the political maneuverings and scientific sleuthing that led him and Candace Pert, then a graduate student in his lab, to a critical breakthrough in the effort to understand addiction. Their discovery--the so-called opiate receptor--is a structure on the surface of certain nerve cells that attracts opiates. Heroin or morphine molecules fit into opiate receptors much as a key fits into the ignition switch of a car--thus turning on the engine of the cell. Snyder and his students were able to show that nerve cells which possess opiate receptors are found in precisely those parts of the brain that control emotion and pain.

Dr. Snyder describes the friendly yet intense competition from other researchers to expand upon this initial discovery. From the work of two Scottish investigators, Hans Kosterlitz and John Hughes, neuroscientists now know not only where opiate receptors are found in the brain but also why they are there: to serve as binding sites for an opiate-like substance produced by the brain itself--the brain's own morphine. This substance, called enkephalin, regulates pain, mood, and a host of other physiological functions.

From this very human chronicle of scientific battles in the ongoing war against pain and addiction, we gain an appreciation of the extraordinary intellectual processes of an eminent scientist. But Dr. Snyder's story of scientific brainstorming also affords us rare glimpses into the fruitful, sometimes frustrating, relationships among scientists which enrich and complicate creative work. We are reminded of the delicate political alliances that are forged at every level of organization, from the lab bench to the Oval Office, as the scientific community attempts to fit its needs to those of the larger society.


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

In response to Nixon's call for a war on drugs in 1972, Congress appropriated funds which enabled Johns Hopkins neuroscientist Snyder and Candace Pert, his graduate student, to discover the "opiate receptor." Heroin and morphine molecules fit into this nerve-cell structure the way a key fits into a car ignition. Yet the search for non-addicting opiates as a solution to drug addiction ultimately proved futile. In a modestly written account interspersed with diagrams and photographs, Snyder describes the steps that led to his noteworthy discovery. He examines chemical treatments of schizophrenia and looks at the brain's natural morphine-like mood regulator, enkephalin, whose discovery led pharmaceutical manufacturers on a costly wild-goose chase. With dry humor he discusses how the politics of science impinged on his relationships with the White House, rival labs and drug companies.
Copyright 1989 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal

The discovery of opiate receptors (cellular structures which attract opiates) and the subsequent discovery of the brain's own opiate-like substance were two of molecular biology's major accomplishments in the early 1970s. Various minds were applied to these challenges--notably the author (director of the neuroscience lab at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine) and his research team. Their success has provided new insight into the nature of addiction and has dramatically influenced the pharmaceutical industry. The technology developed in this endeavor has since been used to identify receptors for the major neurotransmittors in the brain. Snyder engagingly describes the serendipitous nature of discovery and the role of the mentor in science. His well-written account will be accessible to the nonprofessional science reader.
- Laurie Bartolini, Lincoln Lib., Springfield, Ill.
Copyright 1989 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 219 pages
  • Publisher: Harvard University Press; First Edition edition (September 9, 1989)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0674080483
  • ISBN-13: 978-0674080485
  • Product Dimensions: 9.2 x 6.2 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.1 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,732,649 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The 2% solution, May 11, 2007
This review is from: Brainstorming: The Science and Politics of Opiate Research (Hardcover)
"Brainstorming": was published in 1989, just in time for a new drug war. There have other new, new drug wars since. "Brainstorming" was not encouraging, but it is still worth reading.

Richard Nixon was no more sincere about drugs than about anything else. Nevertheless, Nixon's drug war had one good, dramatic and unplanned result.

Solomon Snyder, a laboratory medical researcher, had not paid any attention to opiate addiction until a friend was appointed Nixon's drug czar. By a little bureaucratic one-upsmanship, they managed to shake loose some money (about 2% of the federal antidrug effort) for basic research.

The results were immediate and extraordinary. Snyder and his student Candace Pert identified the receptors in the brain that accept opiates. This explained the mysterious effect of naloxone, which was already used in 1973 to shut down an opium overdose.

Other researchers found similar receptors in the pituitary gland, a big surprise.

The obvious question was: Why had evolution equipped humans with specialized nerve systems to recognize the juice of a poppy? (Another of Snyder's students, a high school student, David Aposhian, showed that all vertebrates have opiate receptors, and it was later shown that invertebrates do, too.)

The answer was that the body creates its own powerful drugs, later named enkephalins and endorphins, and the juice of the poppy happens to mimic their effect.

This led to hopes for a powerful synthetic drug that would block addicting opiates, and for new, non-addicting painkillers. Snyder explains why neither hope was fulfilled. Nor are they likely to be.

On the other hand, the research techniques -- and even more important, the conceptual innovations -- used in the opiate research opened a window on an unsuspected feature of physiology. Though a failure from the antidrug point of view, the knowledge gained has been helpful against many other diseases, such as diabetes.

This is not at all what Nixon and his henchmen intended. They just wanted votes.

George Bush I's drug war has already had its unexpected effect. Unexpected by me, anyway. A most diverse array of commentators -- including many with impeccable conservative credentials, like Milton Friedman -- have responded to Bush's call for action with countercalls for realism.

Snyder is among these. In 15 lucid pages he explains why antidrug laws, starting with the Harrison Narcotics Act of 1914, turned drug use in the United States from a mild problem, which resulted in no deaths, into a continuous disaster that has killed tens of thousands.

Provocative thoughts are packed into Snyder's slim volume, and reforming America's moralistic approach to drugs seems to be among the least significant to him.

His exciting story about breakthrough research has its moments of scandal. "One might have thought that our work identifying and characterizing opiate receptors would be welcomed by narcotic researchers," but one would have been wrong. But beyond telling this interesting tale, Snyder seems most concerned to use his own experience to remark upon the best way that effective scientific research can be fostered.

Government and science are hard to control. Bad motives sometimes produce good results, and the result is even more true. Snyder, an earnest man and therefore an anachronism in the '80s, has a moral to make -- that the handing down of knowledge and values, from teacher to student, is the most effective method in scientific research.

There is not a single word in "Brainstorming" about Bush I's drug war, but the history from this veteran of the last one condemns the repetition of mistakes that were old a generation ago.

2007 UPDATE: Calls for "realism" about drugs are seldom heard in the 21st century, except from users and Libertarians. The new "realism" demands open-ended, open wallet, endless "treatment," although it is now obvious that treatment for addiction doesn't work, at least not often enough to deserve public funding. Besides, alcohol is still the costliest drug of them all.
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