Abstract: Background: Addiction is a chronic, relapsing disorder that presents major global health, social, and economic challenges. Despite the availability of behavioral and pharmacological interventions, relapse remains highly prevalent, underscoring the need for innovative, multidisciplinary strategies in addiction medicine.
Objectives: This review integrates recent evidence from neuroscience and clinical research to highlight the role of noninvasive brain stimulation, stress‐responsive neurobiology, and hospital‐based addiction services in improving understanding and management of substance use disorders.
Study Selection: The review synthesizes findings from three key studies addressing (a) neural modulation and monitoring through noninvasive brain stimulation, (b) stress‐related neurobiological pathways in opiate addiction, and (c) prognostic clinical factors influencing treatment outcomes among hospitalized patients with substance use disorders.
Conclusion: Addiction is a multisystem condition influenced by neurocircuitry dysfunction, hormonal dysregulation, and psychosocial vulnerabilities. Emerging evidence supports the use of brain stimulation techniques, targeted stress‐system interventions, and integrated hospital‐based addiction services to enhance recovery outcomes. A precision‐based, interdisciplinary approach combining neurobiological insight with clinical care can help establish more effective and sustainable treatment frameworks.
Keywords: Addiction medicine, brain stimulation, stress neurobiology, substance use disorder, relapse prevention.
Title: Advances in Addiction Medicine: Neurobiological Insights, Noninvasive Brain Stimulation, and Clinical Prognostic Factors
Author: TL Srinedhi, B.Bharathi, Deepa C.Philip
International Journal of Healthcare Sciences
ISSN 2348-5728 (Online)
Vol. 13, Issue 2, October 2025 - March 2026
Page No: 194-198
Research Publish Journals
Website: www.researchpublish.com
Published Date: 07-November-2025