Posted on October 2, 2023
In order for you to have a clearer understanding of addiction, you need to have a working knowledge of how your brain functions. It is a complex organ, and it is challenging to break down its function, so you can correlate what happens in addiction.
What is the difference between addiction and dependence? Addiction leads to harmful actions to sustain a drug addiction. Dependence is a state of needing the drug to prevent withdrawal symptoms. People addicted to drugs may resort to negative behaviors, like stealing, to sustain their addiction. Dependence is a physiological state that requires drugs to prevent withdrawal symptoms.
Drug addiction is a disorder that affects the brain and causes people to continue using drugs despite harmful consequences.1 Gambling, sex, food, and technology addictions are types of behavioral addiction.
Results From the 2021 National Survey on Drug Use and Health
Severity levels among people aged 12 or older in 2021 with a past year alcohol use disorder, marijuana use disorder, cocaine use disorder, or methamphetamine use disorder include 3:
The human brain is the most complex organ in the body. This three-pound mass of gray and white matter sits at the center of all human activity. You need it for everything you do — from breathing and thinking to enjoying a meal and creating artwork. Your brain helps you understand and respond to your surroundings. In short, your brain is you — everything you think and feel, and who you are. The brain has many internal structures, with some seen in Figure 1.⁴
We often compare the brain to an incredibly complex and intricate computer.⁴ The brain has billions of neurons that form circuits and networks. Each neuron acts as a switch controlling the flow of information. If a neuron receives enough signals from other neurons, it “fires,” sending its own signal on to other neurons in the circuit.⁴
The brain has various circuits for specific tasks, like sensing, thinking, language, and movement. Neurons in the brain, spinal cord, and nerves signal each other.⁴
Neurons send messages, releasing neurotransmitters into a gap between cells. The neurotransmitter crosses the synapse and attaches to receptors on the receiving neuron, like a key into a lock. This causes changes in the receiving cell. Transporters take neurotransmitters back to the neuron and stop communication between neurons. 5
Drugs interfere with the way neurons send, receive, and process signals through these neurotransmitters. Marijuana and heroin can activate receptors by mimicking natural neurotransmitters in the body. This allows the drugs to attach onto and activate the receptors. Although these drugs mimic the brain’s own chemicals, they do not activate receptors in the same way as a natural neurotransmitter. This can lead to abnormal messages being sent through the network.⁴
Cocaine and amphetamines disturb the regular recycling of brain chemicals. Both cause neurons to release excess natural neurotransmitters. This also amplifies or disrupts normal communication between neurons.
What Parts of the Brain are Most Affected by Drug Use?
Tolerance, dependence, and addiction occur after repeated drug taking. This is because chronic drug taking alters the brain. These alterations include changes in brain shape, biochemical makeup, and brain activity. As drug taking continues, the drug influences more and more parts of the brain. These changes can persist for months and months and underlie the chronic nature of addiction. They account for the feelings and behaviors characteristic of addiction.
Sometimes individuals take medicines chronically for chronic medical problems. Individuals with chronic pain take opiates repeatedly for a long time to manage their condition. Chronic drug use can lead to dependence, and individuals may suffer from withdrawal symptoms if they stop taking the drug. But they are not addicts. Dependence is not addiction. Addiction is seeking and taking drugs despite negative consequences; it causes harmful behavior.
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Written by Cynthia Blair RN MA–October 2023
Original Publication: https://www.soulsharbordallas.org/2023/10/the-addicted-brain/
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