• DPMC Moderators: thegreenhand | tryptakid
  • Drug Policy & Media Coverage Welcome Guest
    View threads about
    Posting Rules Bluelight Rules
    Drug Busts Megathread Video Megathread

How Exercise Can Prime the Brain for Addiction

slimvictor

Bluelight Crew
Joined
Dec 29, 2008
Messages
6,483
Statistically, people who exercise are much less likely than inactive people to abuse drugs or alcohol. But can exercise help curb addictions? Some research shows that exercise may stimulate reward centers in the brain, helping to ease cravings for drugs or other substances. But according to an eye-opening new study of cocaine-addicted mice, dedicated exercise may in some cases make it even harder to break an addiction.

The study, conducted by researchers at the Beckman Institute for Advanced Science and Technology at the University of Illinois in Urbana-Champaign, began by dividing male mice into those that had or did not have running wheels in their cages. All of the mice were injected with a chemical that marks newly created brain cells.

The animals then sat in their cages or ran at will for 30 days.

Afterward, the mice were placed in small multiroom chambers in the lab and introduced to liquid cocaine. They liked it.

Researchers frequently use a model known as “conditioned place preference” to study addiction in animals. If a rodent returns to and stubbornly plants itself in a particular place where it has received a drug or other pleasurable experience, then the researchers conclude that the animal has become habituated. It badly wants to repeat the experience that it associates with that place.

All of the mice displayed a decided place preference for the spot within their chamber where they received cocaine. They had learned to associate that location with the pleasures of the drug. All of the mice had, essentially, become addicts.

Some of the sedentary animals were then given running wheels and allowed to start exercising. Meanwhile, those mice that had always had wheels continued to use them.

Then the researchers cut off the animals’ drug supply and watched how long it took them to stop scuttling to their preferred place. This process, known as “extinction of the conditioned place preference,” is thought to indicate that an animal has overcome its addiction.

The researchers noted two distinct patterns among the addicted exercisers. The formerly sedentary mice that had begun running only after they became addicted lost their conditioned place preference quickly and with apparent ease. For them, it appeared relatively easy to break the habit.

Those that had been runners when they first tried cocaine, however, lost their preference slowly, if at all. Many, in fact, never stopped hanging out in the drug-associated locale, a rather poignant reminder of the power of addiction.

“There is good news and maybe not-so-good news about our findings,” says Justin S. Rhodes, a professor of psychology at the University of Illinois and an author, with Martina L. Mustroph and others, of the study, published in The European Journal of Neuroscience.

It does indicate that shedding an addiction acquired when a person has been exercising could be extra challenging, he says.

“But, really, what the study shows,” he continues, “is how profoundly exercise affects learning.”

When the brains of the mice were examined, he points out, the runners had about twice as many new brain cells as the animals that had remained sedentary, a finding confirmed by earlier studies. These cells were centered in each animal’s hippocampus, a portion of the brain critical for associative learning, or the ability to associate a new thought with its context.

So, the researchers propose, the animals that had been running before they were introduced to cocaine had a plentiful supply of new brain cells primed to learn. And what they learned was to crave the drug. Consequently, they had much more difficulty forgetting what they’d learned and moving on from their addiction.


Cont at
http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/04/11/how-exercise-can-prime-the-brain-for-addiction/
 
I've felt like there's been a link to this for a while, at least within myself.

Also when I look at the drug use that has been done over the years by my former high school cross country team...we put a lot of other sports teams to shame.
 
Perhaps this may be a reason why all my buddies that worked a job during high school were potheads!
 
Very interesting. I've wondered if there is any connection between habituating the release of endorphins after working out, and exogenous opioid addiction. Not the topic of the article, but an interesting thought nonetheless.
 
Very interesting. I've wondered if there is any connection between habituating the release of endorphins after working out, and exogenous opioid addiction. Not the topic of the article, but an interesting thought nonetheless.

This is a really good question.
 
I find that exercise helps me to stay away from drugs, not the opposite. Also, mice aren't humans.
 
^The study tends to say that exercise creates new brain cells, making the user of the drugs get higher than they would without exercise.

I do tend to agree with you, however, Foreigner, because nobody becomes a full-blown addict with a single use.

I think the article may be overstating it's thesis about the findings in the title a bit, because if you read it says the mice who use the drugs eventually stop exercising and just get high on the drugs instead. Human beings tend to be far more intelligent than mice (I would hope so! :p) and should be able to cease usage after a single "night of fun" and go right back to exercise, without becoming a drug addict.
 
^ You mean that we shouldn't expect to find any human drug addicts, since we are so intelligent?
 
^ You mean that we shouldn't expect to find any human drug addicts, since we are so intelligent?
Not at all. But most drug addicts started out ignorant to the fact habitual use of addictive substances leads to addiction, OR simply indifferent toward the fact the substance they choose to abuse is addictive and choose to continuously use the substance knowing it could potentially cause a physical dependence.

I believe almost all human beings are capable of trying addictive substances once, making a conscious choice to continue (ab)using a substance or abstain from it, knowing a physical dependence could ensue. Assuming they are not mentally handicapped, of course.

Of course after repeated use, there comes a point-of-no-return where the human being loses self-control and the drug addiction consumes their consciousness. That is when they become an addict. But I have never heard of anyone becoming a full blown addict after a single session with a drug.

And not saying human beings are "too intelligent to be addicts", just that we are more intelligent than rodents, I'm pretty sure lol.
 
^ Some people that I have met probably fail at being more intelligent than rodents. Lol.
But I agree with you, mostly.
However, I have heard people's stories where they claim that they became addicted after a single use.
I believe that they enjoyed the drug so much that they chose to give up their self control / willpower, but it is hard to know for sure.
 
I don't know if this is the same but I love working out then loading a bowl. There is something about that process that makes smoking so much more enjoyable.
 
I also find the combination of the endorphin high with the weed high to be lovely.
 
Top