By Tim Sandle
A study suggests regular marijuana use is
associated with reduced dopamine responses in brain, leading to anxiety
and restlessness, a lower feeling of reward; and, over time, addiction.
Marijuana use has increased across the U.S.
following legalization in several states for medical use and similar
moves, in a smaller number of states, for recreational use.
For example,
usage rates in Colorado have reportedly increased substantially following legalization.
Wider use and considered recommendations on medical grounds does not
make marijuana "safe" and the issues about the physiological impact of
the drug on the body, together with the issue of addiction, remain
contested subjects between scientists.
However this issue is resolved in
the future it remains that the effects of marijuana abuse in the human
brain are not well understood.
A relatively new study has raised concerns about the impact of marijuana
use on dopamine. Marijuana, as with some other drugs, stimulates brain
dopamine levels.
Dopamine is a neurotransmitter
that helps transmit chemical signals to the brain associated with the
brain's reward and pleasure centers. The chemical also plays a role in
controlling movement. Within the brain there are five receptors designed
to detect the chemical. Dopamine is also used artificially in some
medications, to raise the heart rate and increase blood pressure.
Dopamine signalling is considered to be tied to
the rewarding effects of drugs and to be involved with consequential
addiction. The processes involved have been supported by brain imaging
techniques, such as positron emission tomography (PET) scans.
Earlier studies have shown people with low dopamine activity appear to
be more prone to addiction.
Building on this, a Harvard University
researcher has found dopamine signaling adaptation to occur with
marijuana abusers. The effect of this is greater addiction (in a similar
way to nicotine), increased stress responses and irritability. These
latter two responses of increased anxiety and restlessness were bound up
with the feeling of becoming "high" and were linked to same brain
regions.
There were also some concerns about the effects on heart
rhythms.
The research further indicates
that with the feeling of becoming "high," although this effect
continues unabated with long-term marijuana use the feelings of "reward"
associated with the activity become repressed and "relaxation"
associated with the psycho-stimulative effects of the drug are quickly
replaced with irritability and enhanced craving for further doses of
cannabis.
Here is thought that the diminished dopamine response explain
why heavy users need to consume even more excessive amounts of
marijuana, searching for the same levels of euphoria they experienced
during earlier periods of use.
The research, by Bertha Madras, is published in the journal PNAS
and is titled "Dopamine challenge reveals neuroadaptive changes in
marijuana abusers."
This research built on earlier work by Nora Volkow
(National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism) and colleagues
which has also been reported to PNAS ("Decreased dopamine brain reactivity in marijuana abusers is associated with negative emotionality and addiction severity.")
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