ProducedRaw
Bluelighter
- Joined
- Dec 2, 2006
- Messages
- 79
With typical recreational drugs we agonise the receptors in question, enjoy the effects and then suffer while our brains try to make sense of it all and return to balance. What if the problem was approached from the opposite side where antagonists are used in order to force the brain to sling-shot the neurochemical balance into euphoria after the antagonist is out of the body? It appears to completely bypass the problem of tolerance and we already know that this works with, for example, low dose Naloxone and mu-opioid receptors. Why not do the same for dopamine or serotonin? The biggest issue I see with this approach is that antagonising feel-good receptors will probably cause significant discomfort and dysphoria but perhaps this could be overcome by inducing anaesthesia and/or unconsciousness while the antagonist is still present in the body. In other words, dose up on a dopamine antagonist and something which causes unconsciousness before going to sleep and wake up feeling like you're on speed. Does this approach have any merit? Has anyone tried it?
On a related note, is homeostasis governed by a particular part of the brain or is it a distributed mechanism?
On a related note, is homeostasis governed by a particular part of the brain or is it a distributed mechanism?
