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Fwd: All drugs tweak brain the same

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It is not just drugs of abuse. This is a nonscientifict bs term. Pure spin.

What are drugs of abuse? If I take cocaine resposibly like a presription drugs

is it OK? Of course not. It would still affect and change the brain. I believe

the same holds true for almost all drugs. (by the way, cocaine was once a very

popular prescription drug and a mainstay of allopathic medicine)

 

Drugs of non abuse (pharmacueticals), and of abuse (nonpharmacueticals and

pharmacueticals), don't make very much difference. The chemical action upon the

organ is similar and is not different based on the motivation or intent of use

(abuse or not abuse, that is the question) of the taker/user.

 

If one swallows poison does the intent or motivation of the user alter the

results?

 

This type of speaking/thinking has weaseled it's way into discussion/research to

say how bad drugs taken for recreation/pleasure/addiction are from a health

standpoint. Then they turn aound and claim the intent of the user is the

casuative factor somehow(abuse/nonabuse) to keep pharmacueticals clean and free

of the same yardstick.

 

Somehow or rather, those chemicals are not injuious to the brain if the

user/taker is just not an abuser. This is completly contra to scientific

principals and the studies, what little there,prove that the chemicals alter/

change the brains. Both street drugs and big pharma drugs.

 

It is just that the system protects and promotes big pharma politically and

legally and it makes huge amounts of money and it tries to stamp out the illegal

competition from non big pharma sales.

 

After all, a lot of those street drugs used to be big pharma drugs at one time

or another.

 

To get familiar with this concept. Just start substituting the word " chemo "

(for chemical) for any drug, period, and it may open your eyes a little.

 

Frank

 

A drug is a drug is a drug.

 

 

Misty <misty3 wrote:

Health and Healing ,

Armageddon or New Age

Misty

Wed, 17 Sep 2003 00:27:51 +1200

All drugs tweak brain the same

 

All drugs tweak brain the same

 

http://health.nzoom.com/health_detail/0,2811,180966-399-406,00.html

 

 

 

Whether you smoke a cigarette or use cocaine, certain nerve endings in the

brain are tweaked in the same way, which suggests there may be a universal

way to treat addiction, US researchers have said.

 

In fact, alcohol, cocaine, amphetamines, morphine and nicotine all make

brain cells hypersensitive, a team at Stanford University in California

reported.

 

" What we have identified is a single change caused by drugs of abuse with

different molecular mechanisms, " said Dr. Robert Malenka of Stanford

University Medical Center, who led the study.

 

The affected brain cells are in a region of the brain called the ventral

tegmental area, or VTA, Malenka's team reported in the Feb. 20 issue of the

journal Neuron .

 

Last year, Malenka and his colleagues gave cocaine to mice and found that

glutamate, a chemical in the body, was stimulating neurons in the VTA to

release dopamine, a key neurotransmitter or message-carrying chemical

associated with movement. The brain cells stayed super-sensitive to

glutamate for as long as a week, they found.

 

In Wednesday's study, they found the same is true for cocaine, morphine,

amphetamines, nicotine and alcohol. Stress caused similar changes, but

other, non-addictive drugs that act on the brain did not.

 

This could help explain why stress can cause a relapse in addicts. " When

drug addicts who are in remission and are doing fine are subject to stress,

they very often relapse, " he said.

 

The work could eventually lead to a universal drug to battle addiction,

Malenka said. " It's just the beginning of the story, but given that it is

happening in the VTA it is likely to lead someplace, " he said.

 

 

 

 

 

- depressionexplained

- www.spinz.org.nz

- www.phobialist.com

 

 

 

 

MENTAL HEALTH

 

- Chill out those winter blues

- Gene linked to depression risk

- Questions over safety of SSRI antidepressants

- Violent music boosts agressive thoughts

 

 

 

- Appetite sharply cut by protein injection

 

- Scientists find clues to using fat to stop hunger

 

 

DRUGS

 

- Epilepsy drug shown to reduce cravings for alcohol

- Antidepressant use not linked to birth defects

- All drugs tweak brain the same

- Study to compare St John's Wort and prescription drugs

 

 

 

 

 

 

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