this is probably going to sound really dumb, but out of curiosity i'm going to ask it anyways. please bear in mind that i don't have any kind of formal education in chemistry, biology, or pharmacology. and i only have very rudimentary knowledge about how opiates work.
that said, i've read that exogenous opioids work by acting on various neural receptors which are also activated by endogenous opioids produced naturally by the brain. opioid antagonists on the other hand block these receptors and thus lower the production and availability of opioid hormones which cause the effects experienced by consuming exogenous opioids.
now, if these endogenous opioids and their respective receptors exist in our brain naturally, then that probably means that our bodies naturally produce a certain level of opioid hormones albeit in very subtle amounts. now, when someone takes exogenous opiates regularly then their tolerance goes up, and so for the same amount of stimulation on our opioid receptors, less effects are felt. but what if one took an opioid antagonist regularly for an extended period of time. could a counter-tolerance be developed? could your body adjust to having a constant level of opioid antagonists blocking the receptors so that when you stop taking them your body would actually be more sensitive to both endogenous and exogenous opioid and release more opioid hormones naturally, and thus improve one's general mood without the use of any drugs?
is there anything, and i'm sure there are, which i'm leaving out that would not allow such a possibility?
that said, i've read that exogenous opioids work by acting on various neural receptors which are also activated by endogenous opioids produced naturally by the brain. opioid antagonists on the other hand block these receptors and thus lower the production and availability of opioid hormones which cause the effects experienced by consuming exogenous opioids.
now, if these endogenous opioids and their respective receptors exist in our brain naturally, then that probably means that our bodies naturally produce a certain level of opioid hormones albeit in very subtle amounts. now, when someone takes exogenous opiates regularly then their tolerance goes up, and so for the same amount of stimulation on our opioid receptors, less effects are felt. but what if one took an opioid antagonist regularly for an extended period of time. could a counter-tolerance be developed? could your body adjust to having a constant level of opioid antagonists blocking the receptors so that when you stop taking them your body would actually be more sensitive to both endogenous and exogenous opioid and release more opioid hormones naturally, and thus improve one's general mood without the use of any drugs?
is there anything, and i'm sure there are, which i'm leaving out that would not allow such a possibility?