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How Addiction Takes Hold in the Brain
Dopamine
The rewarding effects of drugs of abuse come from large and rapid upsurges in dopamine, a neurochemical critical to stimulating feelings of pleasure and to motivating behavior. The rapid dopamine “rush” from drugs of abuse mimics but greatly exceeds in intensity and duration the feelings that occur in response to such pleasurable stimuli as the sight or smell of food, for example. Repeated exposure to large, drug-induced dopamine surges has the insidious consequence of ultimately blunting the response of the dopamine system to everyday stimuli. Thus the drug disturbs a person’s normal hierarchy.
Topics
How Addiction Takes Hold in the BrainDrugs Target the Brain's Pleasure CenterNeurobiology of Drug AddictionDr. Nora Volkow - Science of AddictionAddiction is a Disease of FreewillDr. Kevin McCauley – Pleasure UnwovenDr. Carlton Erickson - Science of AddictionWhen Addiction Runs in the FamilyGenes & AddictionInteractive Explore Activities
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