MANILA - Scientists from across the University of the Philippines (UP) are pioneering a first-of-its-kind multidisciplinary study into the chemical, physical, and psychological impacts of solvent abuse on the country’s thousands of so-called “Rugby boys and girls.”
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A street girl sniffs 'rugby' in broad daylight in the southern Philippine city of Zamboanga. (Photo by Al Jacinto)
The Novel Approaches to
Treatment of Addiction and Depression using Animal Models is a three-year
research program spearheaded by the UP Manila National Institutes of Health
(UPM-NIH), the National Center for Mental Health, the UP College of Medicine,
the UP Philippine General Hospital, and the UP Diliman College of Science
Institute of Chemistry (UPD-CS IC). It is being supervised by
internationally-renowned neurobehavioral scientist Dr. Gregory Quirk of the
University of Puerto Rico School of Medicine.
“Attempts to treat toluene or ‘Rugby’
addiction have been largely unsuccessful due to severe withdrawal and craving
symptoms that trigger relapse. What is needed to help adolescents overcome
their addictions are new treatments that reduce toluene withdrawal and
craving,” said program leader Dr. Rohani Cena-Navarro of the UPM-NIH.
“Rodent models have been used to
develop such pharmacological treatments for other addictive drugs, but no such
model has been developed for toluene. This collaboration between scientists and
clinicians hopes to address this societal problem using laboratory animals,”
she added.
This research is being supported by the
Department of Science and Technology - Philippine Council for Health Research
and Development (DOST-PCHRD).
Origins
of ‘Rugby boys and girls'
The
densely-populated urban streets of the Philippines are home and playground to
as many as one million street children, many of whom are adolescents from the
poorest families or even abandoned by parents.
Left
to fend for themselves, many turn to substance abuse to alleviate their hunger
by inhaling toluene—an aromatic hydrocarbon solvent found in cheap and
easily-obtainable contact cement, popularly sold under the “Rugby” brand name
in local hardware stores.
Estimated
to number in the thousands nationwide, these young people eventually develop a
physiological addiction and resort to begging, scavenging, or stealing not only
to quell their hunger but also to sustain their toluene addiction.
Seeing
groups of young boys—and girls—running around the streets sniffing bags of glue
has become so commonplace to the ordinary Filipino citizen, that the colloquial
term “Rugby boys” is now a widely-used pejorative.
Substance
abuse among street children is a long-standing societal issue that requires
proper public health intervention. Acknowledging the need for local research to
tackle inhalant abuse among adolescents will be very significant in providing
recommendations and strengthening ongoing support systems, policies, and
interventions.
Addressing
social issues and sex differences
So
where does science fit into this societal issue? This is exactly what this team
of researchers hopes to achieve by developing the first Addiction Research
Laboratory in the country, using animal models.
“In
the years to come, it is our hope that the establishment of this Addiction
Research Program will further open opportunities for research addressing the
craving and withdrawal stages of addiction,” said UPD-CS IC’s Dr. Grace
Gregorio, who is researching how toluene affects rats in an effort to
understand the solvent’s effects on people.
She
and her fellow researchers are also looking into sex differences in the effects
of toluene exposure, which represents a novel approach that has never been done
before. “I bring in my analytical chemistry expertise to this meaningful
undertaking by measuring toluene levels in the blood of male and female
rodents,” Dr. Gregorio said.
“There
is much that we, as a society, don't know and understand about solvent abuse.
One of our research specialists, Jariel Bacar, rightly points out that girls
can be affected too—and in very different ways from boys. The project is
looking into what these differences are,” she explained.
Developing
tailored treatments for solvent-addicted adolescents
The
first-ever model of its kind for toluene-based solvent addiction in the
Philippines, this research is paving the way for new treatments for overcoming
withdrawal and craving. The team hopes to translate their findings for use in
human subjects as an attempt in addressing the pervasive drug addiction and
chronic relapse in individuals. Such experimental treatments for toluene
have not been deeply investigated anywhere else in the world, because inhalant
abuse is not as rampant in more developed countries.
The research team behind the multidisciplinary research program, Novel Approaches to Treatment of Addiction and Depression using Animal Models. Top row (L-R): Ajina Carampel (MD-PhD Student), Richelle Manalo, Dr. Grace Gregorio (UPD-CS IC), Dr. Rohani C. Navarro (Program Leader), Dr. Gregory Quirk (Supervising Scientist), Jariel Bacar and Johanna Munar (Project Technical Specialists I). Bottom row (L-R): Joannes Luke Asis (MD-PhD Student), Noel Agrava (Lab Aide), Brett Castro (University Research Associate), Dr. Bryan Bulatao (Project Leader), Herbert Montalban (Lab Aide), and Arturo Bermejo III (Project Assistant). (Photo by Ilona Janairo)
Now
in its second year, the project has already completed its first two phases:
identifying validated methods to quantify toluene in rodent blood and
establishing the long-term effects of toluene after chronic exposure. Using
validated methods, the team is investigating the effects of chronic exposure
that last long after the drug has been stopped. These include increased
craving for the drug, increased anxiety, and impaired social functioning, all
of which increase the likelihood of relapse following treatment. Novel
treatments will be tested to diminish these withdrawal symptoms and restore the
brain to its pre-addiction state.
Ultimately,
Novel Approaches to Treatment of Addiction and Depression using Animal
Models aims to address one of the greatest challenges faced by today’s
researchers: interweaving science into the fabric of a complex, busy, and
highly diverse society to serve its well-intended purpose to the community that
needs it the most. By the end of the project, the researchers hope to have
developed tailored treatments for boys and girls who are addicted to
toluene. (Mindanao Examiner)







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