What causes addiction?
The word “addiction” is derived from a Latin term for “enslaved by” or “bound to.” Anyone who has struggled to overcome an addiction—or has tried to help someone else to do so—understands why.
Addiction exerts a long and powerful
influence on the brain that manifests in three distinct ways: craving for the
object of addiction, loss of control over its use, and continuing involvement
with it despite adverse consequences.
For many years, experts believed that only
alcohol and powerful drugs could cause addiction. Neuroimaging technologies and
more recent research, however, have shown that certain pleasurable activities,
such as gambling, shopping, and sex, can also co-opt the brain.
Although a standard U.S. diagnostic manual
(the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition
or DSM-IV) describes multiple addictions, each tied to a specific substance or
activity, consensus is emerging that these may represent multiple expressions
of a common underlying brain process. (more after the cut)
New insights into a common problem
Nobody starts out intending to develop an
addiction, but many people get caught in its snare. Consider the latest
government statistics:
- Nearly 23 million Americans—almost one in 10—are addicted to alcohol or other drugs.
- More than two-thirds of people with addiction abuse alcohol.
- The top three drugs causing addiction are marijuana, opioid (narcotic) pain relievers, and cocaine.
In the 1930s, when researchers first began to
investigate what caused addictive behavior, they believed that people who
developed addictions were somehow morally flawed or lacking in willpower.
Overcoming addiction, they thought, involved punishing miscreants or,
alternately, encouraging them to muster the will to break a habit.
The scientific consensus has changed since
then. Today we recognize addiction as a chronic disease that changes both brain
structure and function. Just as cardiovascular disease damages the heart and
diabetes impairs the pancreas, addiction hijacks the brain. This happens as the
brain goes through a series of changes, beginning with recognition of pleasure
and ending with a drive toward compulsive behavior.
Pleasure principle
The brain registers all pleasures in the same
way, whether they originate with a psychoactive drug, a monetary reward, a
sexual encounter, or a satisfying meal. In the brain, pleasure has a distinct
signature: the release of the neurotransmitter dopamine in the nucleus
accumbens, a cluster of nerve cells lying underneath the cerebral cortex (see
illustration). Dopamine release in the nucleus accumbens is so consistently
tied with pleasure that neuroscientists refer to the region as the brain’s
pleasure center.
All drugs of abuse, from nicotine to heroin,
cause a particularly powerful surge of dopamine in the nucleus accumbens. The
likelihood that the use of a drug or participation in a rewarding activity will
lead to addiction is directly linked to the speed with which it promotes
dopamine release, the intensity of that release, and the reliability of that
release.
Even taking the same drug through different
methods of administration can influence how likely it is to lead to addiction.
Smoking a drug or injecting it intravenously, as opposed to swallowing it as a
pill, for example, generally produces a faster, stronger dopamine signal and is
more likely to lead to drug misuse.
Brain's Reward Center
Addictive drugs provide a shortcut to the
brain’s reward system by flooding the nucleus accumbens with dopamine. The
hippocampus lays down memories of this rapid sense of satisfaction, and the
amygdala creates a conditioned response to certain stimuli.
Learning process
Scientists once believed that the experience
of pleasure alone was enough to prompt people to continue seeking an addictive
substance or activity. But more recent research suggests that the situation is
more complicated. Dopamine not only contributes to the experience of pleasure,
but also plays a role in learning and memory—two key elements in the transition
from liking something to becoming addicted to it.
According to the current theory about addiction,
dopamine interacts with another neurotransmitter, glutamate, to take over the
brain’s system of reward-related learning. This system has an important role in
sustaining life because it links activities needed for human survival (such as
eating and sex) with pleasure and reward.
The reward circuit in the brain includes
areas involved with motivation and memory as well as with pleasure. Addictive
substances and behaviors stimulate the same circuit—and then overload it.
Repeated exposure to an addictive substance
or behavior causes nerve cells in the nucleus accumbens and the prefrontal
cortex (the area of the brain involved in planning and executing tasks) to
communicate in a way that couples liking something with wanting it, in turn
driving us to go after it. That is, this process motivates us to take action to
seek out the source of pleasure.
Do you have addiction?
Determining whether you have addiction isn’t
completely straightforward. And admitting it isn’t easy, largely because of the
stigma and shame associated with addiction. But acknowledging the problem is
the first step toward recovery.
A “yes” answer to any of the following three
questions suggests you might have a problem with addiction and should—at the
very least—consult a health care provider for further evaluation and guidance.
- Do you use more of the substance or engage in the behavior more often than in the past?
- Do you have withdrawal symptoms when you don’t have the substance or engage in the behavior?
- Have you ever lied to anyone about your use of the substance or extent of your behavior?
Development of tolerance
Over time, the brain adapts in a way that
actually makes the sought-after substance or activity less pleasurable.
In nature, rewards usually come only with
time and effort. Addictive drugs and behaviors provide a shortcut, flooding the
brain with dopamine and other neurotransmitters. Our brains do not have an easy
way to withstand the onslaught.
Addictive drugs, for example, can release two
to 10 times the amount of dopamine that natural rewards do, and they do it more
quickly and more reliably. In a person who becomes addicted, brain receptors
become overwhelmed. The brain responds by producing less dopamine or
eliminating dopamine receptors—an adaptation similar to turning the volume down
on a loudspeaker when noise becomes too loud.
As a result of these adaptations, dopamine
has less impact on the brain’s reward center. People who develop an addiction
typically find that, in time, the desired substance no longer gives them as
much pleasure. They have to take more of it to obtain the same dopamine “high”
because their brains have adapted—an effect known as tolerance.
Compulsion takes over
At this point, compulsion takes over. The
pleasure associated with an addictive drug or behavior subsides—and yet the
memory of the desired effect and the need to recreate it (the wanting)
persists. It’s as though the normal machinery of motivation is no longer
functioning.
The learning process mentioned earlier also
comes into play. The hippocampus and the amygdala store information about
environmental cues associated with the desired substance, so that it can be
located again. These memories help create a conditioned response—intense
craving—whenever the person encounters those environmental cues.
Cravings contribute not only to addiction but
to relapse after a hard-won sobriety. A person addicted to heroin may be in
danger of relapse when he sees a hypodermic needle, for example, while another
person might start to drink again after seeing a bottle of whiskey. Conditioned
learning helps explain why people who develop an addiction risk relapse even
after years of abstinence.
Recovery is possible
It is not enough to “just say no”—as the
1980s slogan suggested. Instead, you can protect (and heal) yourself from
addiction by saying “yes” to other things. Cultivate diverse interests that
provide meaning to your life. Understand that your problems usually are
transient, and perhaps most importantly, acknowledge that life is not always
supposed to be pleasurable.
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