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  • Addiction affects everybody.

  • It is leading cause of accidental death in our society.

  • The word itself is derived from the ancient

  • Roman term forenslaved byorbound to.”

  • Beating addiction is extremely tough.

  • The drugs and behaviors that lead to addiction

  • hijack the brain and wreak havoc in the body.

  • Time for some real chemistry talk.

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  • Nearly 24 million americans over the age of

  • 12 are addicted to alcohol or other drugs.

  • That’s almost the population of Texas.

  • Years ago, many people thought that

  • Addiction was just sign of a flawed character

  • or a lack of willpower, relegated to hobos

  • or hilarious Boston bar-dwelling drunkards.

  • But we now know that’s not it -- brain chemistry plays a big part.

  • Our brains like stuff that makes us feel good.

  • It could be alcohol, a jelly donut, romantic

  • encounters or all kinds of other stuff.

  • No matter what it is, the things that make you feel good are processed through

  • the reward seeking pathway in the brain.

  • A region deep in the brain called the

  • ventral tegmental area releases a “feel good

  • chemical messenger called dopamine

  • to a region higher up in the brain

  • called the nucleus accumbens.

  • This region is involved in aspects of emotion and motivation.

  • As dopamine surges through the

  • Nucleus accumbens, we feel a surge

  • of pleasurable excitement and energy.

  • The surge of dopamine also makes us

  • want to do whatever we just did again.

  • Psychoactive drugs like amphetamines

  • and cocaine supersize this reaction,

  • increasing the amount of available dopamine

  • in the brain by as much as ten times.

  • The resulting euphoricrushorhigh

  • recalibrates the brain, making it think that this

  • higher level of dopamine is the new normal.

  • This sets some people on a course toward drug abuse.

  • If a person continues using drugs,

  • The brain adapts to these overwhelming

  • Surges by reducing the number of dopamine receptors

  • and making the existing receptors less sensitive to dopamine.

  • This has a double-whammy effect on drug users.

  • Fewer dopamine receptors and lower

  • dopamine sensitivity means a lower

  • ability to enjoy other everyday activities, like eating donuts.

  • In other words, you need more of a drug,

  • food or certain activity to get the same pleasurable rush.

  • For drug addicts, that might mean more

  • amphetamines or cocaine to get your brain

  • to produce that surge of dopamine again.

  • If you try to quit, you can go into withdrawal.

  • Think about it. If the drug or activity that was

  • at the controls of your brain is suddenly

  • gone, the brain has no idea what to do.

  • It’s like someone hopping off the

  • otherside of a see saw from you.

  • Your dopamine levels crash, and

  • your system goes out of whack.

  • Depressants like alcohol chemically slow down your brain.

  • Alcohol inhibits a molecule called glutamate, which is an excitatory transmitter.

  • It also boosts GABA, which slows down brain activity.

  • To counteract the effects of the depressant,

  • your brain has to produce more adrenaline,

  • more norepinephrine, to keep you alert and focused.

  • When youre not drunk, suddenly you don’t

  • need that boost, but it’s there anyway.

  • That can cause tremors, nausea, difficulty

  • breathing and heart palpitations.

  • Over time, addiction can cause

  • permanent damage to the brain.

  • But this cycle can be broken, and

  • recovering addicts can go on to lead happy and productive lives.

  • Bottom line, if you know someone who is addicted

  • to something, anything, get them help.

  • There are some great links on recovery and

  • other resources in the description below.

  • Be safe out there, chemheads.

  • Speaking of things that are addictive, check

  • out our episodes on iPhones and pizza.

  • And for more weekly chemistry videos,

  • make sure to hit that subscribe button.

Addiction affects everybody.

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