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  • More than 3,000 years ago, a flower began to appear in remedies

  • in Ancient Egyptian medical texts.

  • Across the Mediterranean, the ancient Minoans

  • likely found ways to use the same plant for its high.

  • Both ancient civilizations were on to something

  • opium, an extract of the poppy in question,

  • can both induce pleasure and reduce pain.

  • Though opium has remained in use ever since,

  • it wasn't until the 19th century that one of its chemical compounds,

  • morphine, was identified and isolated for medical use.

  • Morphine, codeine, and other substances made directly from the poppy

  • are called opiates.

  • In the 20th century, drug companies created a slew of synthetic substances

  • similar to these opiates,

  • including heroin, hydrocodone, oxycodone, and fentanyl.

  • Whether synthetic or derived from opium,

  • these compounds are collectively known as opioids.

  • Synthetic or natural, legal or illicit,

  • opioid drugs are very effective painkillers, but they are also highly addictive.

  • In the 1980s and 90s,

  • pharmaceutical companies began to market opioid painkillers aggressively,

  • actively downplaying their addictive potential

  • to both the medical community and the public.

  • The number of opioid painkillers prescriptions skyrocketed,

  • and so did cases of opioid addiction, beginning a crisis that continues today.

  • To understand why opioids are so addictive,

  • it helps to trace how these drugs affect the human body from the first dose,

  • through repeated use, to what happens when long-term use stops.

  • Each of these drugs has slightly different chemistry,

  • but all act on the body's opioid system by binding to opioid receptors in the brain.

  • The body's endorphins temper pain signals by binding to these receptors,

  • and opioid drugs bind much more strongly, for longer.

  • So opioid drugs can manage much more severe pain than endorphins can.

  • Opioid receptors also influence everything from mood to normal bodily functions.

  • With these functions, too, opioids' binding strength and durability

  • mean their effects are more pronounced and widespread

  • than those of the body's natural signaling molecules.

  • When a drug binds to opioid receptors, it triggers the release of dopamine,

  • which is linked to feelings of pleasure and may be responsible

  • for the sense of euphoria that characterizes an opioid high.

  • At the same time, opioids suppress the release of noradrenaline,

  • which influences wakefulness, breathing, digestion, and blood pressure.

  • A therapeutic dose decreases noradrenaline enough to cause side effects

  • like constipation.

  • At higher doses opioids can decrease heart and breathing rates to dangerous levels,

  • causing loss of consciousness and even death.

  • Over time, the body starts to develop a tolerance for opioids.

  • It may decrease its number of opioid receptors,

  • or the receptors may become less responsive.

  • To experience the same release of dopamine and resulting mood effects as before,

  • people have to take larger and larger doses

  • a cycle that leads to physical dependence and addiction.

  • As people take more opioids to compensate for tolerance,

  • noradrenaline levels become lower and lower,

  • to a point that could impact basic bodily functions.

  • The body compensates by increasing its number of noradrenaline receptors

  • so it can detect much smaller amounts of noradrenaline.

  • This increased sensitivity to noradrenaline

  • allows the body to continue functioning normally

  • in fact, it becomes dependent on opioids to maintain the new balance.

  • When someone who is physically dependent on opioids stops taking them abruptly,

  • that balance is disrupted.

  • Noradrenaline levels can increase within a day of ceasing opioid use.

  • But the body takes much longer to get rid of

  • all the extra noradrenaline receptors it made.

  • That means there's a period of time

  • when the body is too sensitive to noradrenaline.

  • This oversensitivity causes withdrawal symptoms,

  • including muscle aches, stomach pains, fever, and vomiting.

  • Though temporary, opioid withdrawal can be incredibly debilitating.

  • In serious cases, someone in withdrawal can be violently ill

  • for days or even weeks.

  • People who are addicted to opioids aren't necessarily using the drugs

  • to get high anymore, but rather to avoid being sick.

  • Many risk losing wages or even jobs while in withdrawal,

  • or may not have anyone to take care of them during withdrawal.

  • If someone goes back to using opioids later,

  • they can be at particularly high risk for overdose,

  • because what would have been a standard dose while their tolerance was high,

  • can now be lethal.

  • Since 1980, accidental deaths from opioid overdose

  • have grown exponentially in the United States,

  • and opioid addictions have also exploded around the world.

  • While opioid painkiller prescriptions are becoming more closely regulated,

  • cases of overdose and addiction are still increasing,

  • especially among younger people.

  • Many of the early cases of addiction were middle-aged people

  • who became addicted to painkillers they had been prescribed,

  • or received from friends and family members with prescriptions.

  • Today, young people are often introduced to prescription opioid drugs in those ways

  • but move on to heroin or illicit synthetic opioids that are cheaper

  • and easier to come by.

  • Beyond tighter regulation of opioid painkillers,

  • what can we do to reverse the growing rates of addiction and overdose?

  • A drug called naloxone is currently our best defense against overdose.

  • Naloxone binds to opioid receptors but doesn't activate them.

  • It blocks other opioids from binding to the receptors,

  • and even knocks them off the receptors to reverse an overdose.

  • Opioid addiction is rarely a stand-alone illness;

  • frequently, people with opioid dependence are also struggling

  • with a mental health condition.

  • There are both inpatient and outpatient programs that combine

  • medication, health services, and psychotherapy.

  • But many of these programs are very expensive,

  • and the more affordable options can have long waiting lists.

  • They also often require complete detoxification from opioids

  • before beginning treatment.

  • Both the withdrawal period and the common months-long stay in a facility

  • can be impossible for people who risk losing jobs and housing in that timeframe.

  • Opioid maintenance programs aim to address some of these obstacles

  • and eliminate opioid abuse using a combination

  • of medication and behavior therapy.

  • These programs avoid withdrawal symptoms with drugs

  • that bind to opioid receptors but don't have the psychoactive effects

  • of painkillers, heroin, and other commonly abused opioids.

  • Methadone and buprenorphine

  • are the primary opioid maintenance drugs available today,

  • but doctors need a special waiver to prescribe them

  • even though no specific training or certification

  • is required to prescribe opioid painkillers.

  • Buprenorphine can be so scarce

  • that there's even a growing black market for it.

  • There's still a long way to go with combating opioid addiction,

  • but there are great resources for making sense of the treatment options.

  • If you or someone you know is struggling with opioid use in the United States,

  • the Department of Health and Human Services

  • operates a helpline: 800-662-4357

  • and a database of more than 14,000 substance abuse facilities in the US:

  • www.hhs.gov/opioids

More than 3,000 years ago, a flower began to appear in remedies

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