Many people assume that an addict's substance abuse is responsible for
the damage done to his or her brain. New research shows that some of
that "damage" may have been there to begin with.

Chronic drug users have fewer dopamine D2 receptors than nonusers in the
reward pathways of their brain, which often makes them less sensitive to
natural pleasures such as food and attractive mates. Scientists believe
this receptor deficit may reinforce addiction by causing users to seek
from drugs what they are unable to get naturally the "high" caused by a
surge of dopamine.

Now Jeffrey Dalley and his colleagues at the university of Cambridge
have shown that some people may be born with an abnormally low D2
receptor count, predisposing them to impulsive behavior and drug
addiction.

The team compared the brains of six impulsive rats and six normal rats
and than allowed the animals to self-administer cocaine. The impulsive
rats became addicted more quickly than their no impulsive lab mates, and
they showed a significantly lower number of D2 receptors in the ventral
striatum, a brain region associated with reward anticipation and
craving. The researchers found no differences in the dorsolateral
striatum, an area involved in compulsive drug-seeking behavior. A
decrease in D2 receptors within this brain area, according to past
findings, is seen most commonly after habitual drug use. "This last
point is crucial because it suggests that progressive drug use produces
progressive changes in the brain," Daley says.

The scientists proposed a hypothesis: some drug addicts are born with a
localized reduction of D2 receptors in the ventral striatum. This
anomaly predisposes them to high levels of impulsivity, which may lead
to their initial experimentation, which drugs. Long-term drug abuse, in
turn, may cause damage in the dorsolateral striatum and other parts of
the brain's reward pathway, causing addicts to compulsively seek out
drugs.

If the researchers are correct, D2 receptors may one day be used to
identify people at high risk for drug abuse.



Happy Learning,


Yovan P. Putra
www.primastudy.com <http://www.primastudy.com/>
Expand your genius through  Total-Mind Learning  Series coaching 
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