| SolveYourProblem
eLearning Series:
I Don't Want To Be Addicted Anymore!
( 13 pages )
How
Do I Get Addicted To Something?
Many researchers
believe that addiction is both a behavior which can be controlled
to some extent and also a brain disease. Plus, since some testing
with functional magnetic resonance imaging (FMRI) found that
all addictions tend to cause nearly the same reactions inside
the brain, there could be one type of control model for addiction
health-related issues. In other words, just as there is one
disorder or disease labeled asthma, there would be one for
addiction,
covering all addictions; gambling, smoking, overeating, drugs,
etc. Then one main treatment strategy or plan could be used
to treat all addictions.
How addiction
works in a nutshell is like this. The brain, the
center of the body’s
nervous system, handles addiction by increasing dopamine levels
in response to increased reactions from behaviors, also
referred
to as compulsions, like gambling or over eating, and / or in
response to increased repeated substance abuse, like from
cocaine
or alcohol. This addiction affects the three functioning
processes of the nervous system; sensing, perceiving and
reacting.
How? Let’s take a quick peak…
Dopamine, the chemical
transmitter to the “pleasure center,” the place where survival
instincts like eating and reproduction focus in the brain, activates
cells individually or energizes them. Each energized cell in
turn energizes another cell, and so on down the line, resulting
in a spontaneous or systematic process of ecstasy or elation.
The problem is
the brain doesn’t realize what it is that is causing the
ecstasy
reaction. So when this flutter of activity increases the creation
of dopamine for the negative behaviors and substances like
drugs,
alcohol, gambling, etc., it neglects the natural survival instinct
reaction mechanisms, replacing them with the ecstasy instead.
Note that also,
depending upon the addiction, nervous system functions are
altered.
So sensing, perceiving and reacting functions of individuals
are impeded. For example, alcohol is a depressant and slows
down all of these functions. So a drunk driver facing an
immediate
collision will in all likelihood react slower than a healthy,
alert driver. Whether or not the addictive substances are
inhaled, going into the lung system; or injected, traveling
via the blood system; or swallowed, entering the digestive
system,
also affects different bodily reactions, responses and overall
health.
One long-term
effect is an increased tolerance level with dopamine reaching
out into
other brain areas that cloud judgment and behavioral considerations
and choices. Ultimately depression results, even amidst
opposing or negative stimuli, like the negative effects of
narcotics on behaviors and on the body / mind and like trying
to withdrawal
or discontinue use.
Note: other long-term
effects can include changing of the brain’s shape and possible
permanent brain damage, depending upon the addiction and length
of compulsive activity. And other health problems like cancer
from cigarette smoking can result.
Addiction summed
up is: a compulsive behavior despite negative consequences.
Other
Factors Involved In Addictions
Of course no two
people are 100 percent the same. So since internal genetic,
external environmental, behavioral factors and influences
vary, so can addiction issues with each person. In other
words,
a child born of an alcoholic parent may have an altered or
different brain chemistry or make up than a child not born
of an alcoholic.
However, other factors need to be taken into account with regards
to whether or not and to what extent the child is susceptible
to addictive behaviors or substances. For instance, genetics,
mental state and the environmental setting of the child,
especially
during early developmental years could all play key roles as
to how the child or growing adult will react when confronted
with certain behaviors or instances.
So take for example
a soldier. Surviving temporarily on the only remedy available
in hostile territory, he becomes addicted to morphine while
outside his element or home environment. Later he returns to
his home environment. Will he stay addicted to the morphine?
Will it be difficult to stop using it?
The answers vary,
depending upon the soldier’s predisposition or susceptibility
to addiction; his home environment, his mental state, his genetics
with family history, and other factors. In other words, if he
came from a background of living long-term with a family of
addicts, socialized with addicts in his neighborhood and school
environments, and already battled with smoking cigarettes, marijuana
and other substances routinely, this soldier may have a difficult
time withdrawing from morphine. Whereas, a soldier who had never
seen addiction up close before, either in his family, neighbors,
school friends, etc., and who otherwise came back with a fairly
healthy mental state, may be able to stop using morphine with
little or no problems and get back to his “normal” routine.
Which leads to, “How can you tell if someone is addicted or
not?
> Home > Addictions
Main Page
|