Huffer's High Hits Brain Hard

fruitfly

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Huffer's High Hits Brain Hard
Study Shows Chemical in Spray Paint, Glue Affects Brain Like Harder Drugs
By Jennifer Warner, WebMD Medical News
Jan. 10, 2007

"Huffing" -- sniffing products like spray paint or glue to get high -- may affect the brain the same way harder drugs, like cocaine, do.

A new study shows inhaling toluene, a compound commonly found in products like paint thinner and glue, triggers the release of dopamine in the brain of laboratory rats.

Dopamine release is associated with a feeling of euphoria and is linked to drug addiction.

Although many young people may view huffing as a harmless party drug, the researchers say their results suggest toluene activates the brain in the same way illegal drugs like cocaine do and that inhalant abuse may lead to drug addiction.

Inhaling toluene can also cause brain damage and sudden death.

Huffing Hits Brain Hard

In the study, published in Neuropsychopharmacology, researchers applied concentrations of toluene similar to those found in humans after "huffing" to the brains of rats, then measured the response.

They found the drug was quickly absorbed by brain tissue and directly activated the release of dopamine (DA) in the brain.

In addition, the magnitude of the release did not decrease with prolonged exposure to toluene.

The researchers say the study shows the effects of inhalant abuse on the brain may be more serious than previously thought.

Earlier conclusions that the huffer's high is caused by something other than dopamine release "may be premature," write researcher Arthur C. Riegel, of the department of pharmacology at the University of Arizona, Tucson, and Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, and colleagues.

"Furthermore, given the alarming increase in inhalant abuse among youth, additional studies examining the interaction of toluene and other inhalants with the [dopamine reward] pathway are warranted," they write.

Link
 
fruitfly said:
In the study, published in Neuropsychopharmacology, researchers applied concentrations of toluene similar to those found in humans after "huffing" to the brains of rats, then measured the response.

They found the drug was quickly absorbed by brain tissue and directly activated the release of dopamine (DA) in the brain.

In addition, the magnitude of the release did not decrease with prolonged exposure to toluene.

Does that mean there is no (or little) tolerance, or am I misunderstanding it. It's interesting article, gives a new perspective on what people are doing to themselves. Thanks for the post =)
 
fruitfly said:
"Huffing" -- sniffing products like spray paint or glue to get high -- may affect the brain the same way harder drugs, like cocaine, do.

A new study shows inhaling toluene, a compound commonly found in products like paint thinner and glue, triggers the release of dopamine in the brain of laboratory rats.

yes, becuase huffing solvents does something to dopamine in rat brains, its just like cocaine!

on a side note, i wonder if different volatile sovents have different binding profiles? does gasoline feel different from toluene or trichloroethane? also, i wonder what the pharmacological difference between huffing volatile solvents like toluene and medically used gasses such as nitrous oxide and the halothane derivatives are.
 
also, i wonder what the pharmacological difference between huffing volatile solvents like toluene and medically used gasses such as nitrous oxide and the halothane derivatives are.

I'll give you a hint. Solvents suffocate and kill your brain cells. A volatile anaesthetic does not.

It is very hard to find information given to the public about inhalants that makes a distinction between medically safe, low risk inhalants such as nitrous oxide, and the inhalants that are known to cause nerve/brain/liver damage.
 
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fruitfly said:
^ From the abstract:
Here, using in vitro electrophysiology, we show that application of behaviorally relevant concentrations of toluene directly stimulates DA neurons in the ventral tegmental area (VTA), but not surrounding midbrain regions. Toluene stimulation of VTA neurons persists when synaptic transmission is reduced. Moreover, unlike non-DA neurons, the magnitude of VTA DA neuron firing does not decline during longer exposures designed to emulate 'huffing'. Using dual-probe in vivo microdialysis, we show that perfusion of toluene directly into the VTA increases DA concentrations in the VTA (somatodendritic release) and its terminal projection site, the ACB. These results provide the first demonstration that even brief exposure to toluene increases action potential drive onto mesoaccumbal VTA DA neurons, thereby enhancing DA release in the ACB.

Thanks for the reply Fruitfly, but I'm even more confused lol. Could you (or anyone) break it down in layman terms? =D
 
two reasons that pop to my mind why kids do this:

1. It's a cheap high, easy to get (well it's legal...)

2. they are unaware of the potential dangers of doing this

Too bad, so sad

:|
 
The reason kids try inhalants is some educational failure at an early age. We don't have enough solid education against inhalants and other dangerous, legal highs in our school system. Our whole education system with regards to dealing with drug issues is completely insufficient -- it does little to stifle curiosity about trying them.

I remember back in middle school, a deputy from the police department brought a giant board filled with samples of drugs to educate us, and many kids cracked jokes about doing them, or stealing them, or saying that the effects sounded cool when they were described. By that point, I know kids were inhaling correction fluid and the like, and I'm pretty sure there wasn't much education about volatile solvents back before that in elementary school. Something needs to be fixed, here.
 
^When the schools tell kids weed will kill you, or get you hooked on heroin because it's laced, they stop trusting them...and end up ignoring all of the information they feed them.

I agree, definitely need some changes in the educational system on drugs. They could start with the truth.
 
stirfry said:
on a side note, i wonder if different volatile sovents have different binding profiles? does gasoline feel different from toluene or trichloroethane? also, i wonder what the pharmacological difference between huffing volatile solvents like toluene and medically used gasses such as nitrous oxide and the halothane derivatives are.

Having tried nitrous oxide, butane, diethyl ether and chloroform in my younger days, i can confirm that they all feel distinctly different, and so i would imagine petrol and toluene have their own unique characters also although even at age 14 i was never quite dumb enough to try those...

From a pharmacological perspective i believe they all have similar mechanisms of action (NMDA antagonist / GABA agonist) but different solvents will have slightly different effects, i.e. nitrous oxide is only an NMDA antagonist whereas ether affects both targets. And from a safety standpoint, the acute neurotoxicity and overdose risk of most inhaled solvents of abuse is far, far higher than that of the inhaled medical anaesthetics.
 
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