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  • BDD Moderators: Keif’ Richards

why do opiates both relieve pain and make you high?

mike1127

Bluelighter
Joined
Jul 26, 2013
Messages
24
Can someone give me a succinct explanation why opiates both relieve pain and get you high? I know very little biochemistry and neurology, but it's easy for me to image that opiates affect pain nerves or "pain receptors" or something. That seems like a very specific action in the brain. But how does that relate to feelings of pleasure? Is there a single "pleasure system" in the brain that is also stimulated by the opiates? Is it just coincidence that opiates affect both systems, or is there some deeper link?


Mike
 
The human body naturally produces its own opiate-like substances and uses them as neurotransmitters. These substances include endorphins, enkephalins, and dynorphin, often collectively known as endogenous opioids. Endogenous opioids modulate our reactions to painful stimuli. They also regulate vital functions such as hunger and thirst and are involved in mood control, immune response, and other processes.

The reason that opiates such as heroin and morphine affect us so powerfully is that these exogenous substances bind to the same receptors as our endogenous opioids. There are three kinds of receptors widely distributed throughout the brain: mu, delta, and kappa receptors.

These receptors, through second messengers, influence the likelihood that ion channels will open, which in certain cases reduces the excitability of neurons. This reduced excitability is the likely source of the euphoric effect of opiates and appears to be mediated by the mu and delta receptors.

This euphoric effect also appears to involve another mechanism in which the GABA-inhibitory interneurons of the ventral tegmental area come into play. By attaching to their mu receptors, exogenous opioids reduce the amount of GABA released (see animation). Normally, GABA reduces the amount of dopamine released in the nucleus accumbens. By inhibiting this inhibitor, the opiates ultimately increase the amount of dopamine produced and the amount of pleasure felt.

Chronic consumption of opiates inhibits the production of cAMP, but this inhibition is offset in the long run by other cAMP production mechanisms. When no opiates are available, this increased cAMP production capacity comes to the fore and results in neural hyperactivity and the sensation of craving the drug.


Google mufacka, noimsayin

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It's obvious from the biochemistry that opiates have multiple effects, but I think my question is why do these multiple effects go together? Is it basically the idea that evolution designed creatures so that injuries result in some pain deadening and euphoric effects, for the critical reason that this increases the functioning of the creature? The euphoria in particular? Is it nature's compassion? Has anyone done work on the evolutionary biology of these effects? How do opiates vary from endorphins in the creation of euphoria?
 
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