Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Science of Addiction

Drugs are chemicals that tap into the brain's communication system and interfere with the way nerve cells normally send and receive information. Different drugs affect the body differently. Some drugs can even change the brain permanently.

Drugs like marijuana and heroin work by turning on neurons because their properties work like a neurotransmitter, they can even trick receptors and work as nerve cells. The problem with this is that they send out abnormal messages "messing up" the body.

Drugs like amphetamine cause cells to produce an abnormal amount of neurotransmitters as well as preventing the recycling of brain chemicals. This causes an over exaggerated message sent out to the body which greatly wears the communication channels down. It could be compared to the difference between someone whispering in your ear and screaming into the microphone.

The one thing that all drugs have in common, be it nicotine, cocaine, marijuana, and methamphetamine, is that they all reward the brains limbic system. When the brain responds to feelings of pleasure it releases dopamine into the blood system. Drugs cause dopamine to flood the system. The flood of domamine produces the "high" and is highly addictive.

3 comments:

  1. I thought your post was very strong and thorough. It was informative and easy to understand. The only thing I would work on is not starting 3/4 drugs. --Keara

    ReplyDelete
  2. I personally think that your post was great and that it talked in detail of the website.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Your post was good! You did a nice job at summarizing the information! It was very easy to understand and comprehend.

    ReplyDelete