The vaccine works by stimulating the immune system to attack when cocaine is taken. Normally, cocaine molecules would be too small to trigger a reaction by the immune system; however, researchers at Baylor have created the vaccine by attaching inactivated cocaine molecules to inactivated cholera proteins. As a result, the body experiences an immune response to the cholera, and subsequently to plain cocaine as well. Antibodies attach to the drug and keep it from getting to the user's brain. If the drug cannot reach the user's brain, the user will not experience a high.
David Eagleman, another Baylor neuroscientist, commented on the project's unique approach:
"It's a very clever idea. ... Scientists have spent the last few decades figuring out reward pathways in the brain and how drugs like cocaine hijack the system. It turns out those pathways are difficult to rewire once they've seen the drug. But the vaccine just circumvents all that."(Sources: www.msnbc.msn.com)
Labels: cocaine, medications, vaccine
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