Psychology
In order to develop effective treatment programs for drug addicts, it is essential to maintain a basic knowledge of the physiological basis of their cravings. Given social and political mandates calling for a cessation of drug abuse or at the very least for the implementation of harm reduction, it is just as important to administer to those exposed to addictive substances as it is to develop methods of preventing exposure. In addition, an ability to explain the neuro-scientific effects of drug use allows those that are responsible for prevention to provide potential users with deterrents that are less dogmatic and more circumspect. To these ends, neuroscience has developed a new understanding of the reasons for addiction.
Behavioral neuroscience has taught us that humans, like other animals, crave certain pharmaceutical agents. Studies have enabled scientists to better understand the neuro-chemistry of pleasure and of cravings. A side effect of these studies is that scientists are now armed with many more methods of artificially inducing pleasure and other moods in the human brain.
The agents that have provided the strongest reaction include opiates and amphetamine-like psycho-stimulants. Two of the most emotionally attractive types of drugs have been narcotics such as morphine and heroin, and psycho-stimulants such as cocaine and amphetamines. Studies have shown that animals share the human propensity to self-administer these drugs if this opportunity is available to them. This is because these drugs interact with specific receptors in the brain. These receptors normally help mediate various pleasures and psychic excitement. This In the example of heroin addiction, considered one of the most socially disruptive opiate-derivative addictions, the brain contains mu-opiate receptors. According to Affective Neuroscience: The Foundations of Human and Animal Emotions by Jaak Panksepp,
These receptors normally control an animal's urges to maintain various brain and bodily balances (i.e., homeostatic balance) via feeding, sexual/social behavior, and so forth. The psychic reflections of doing "the right thing biologically" are feelings of satisfaction and pleasure. Which of the many brain opiate systems actually mediate this subjective feeling is not well understood, but...
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