Opiates Addiction and Opiates Detox including opiate withdrawal, information
on opiates including hydrocodone, oxycodone, and hydromorphone
Opiates
elicit their powerful effects by activating opiate receptors that are
widely distributed throughout the brain and body. Once an opiate reaches
the brain, it quickly activates the opiate receptors that are found in
many brain regions and produces an effect that correlates with the area
of the brain involved. Two important effects produced by opiates, such
as morphine, are pleasure (or reward) and pain relief. The brain itself
also produces substances known as endorphins that activate the opiate
receptors. Research indicates that endorphins are involved in many things,
including respiration, nausea, vomiting, pain modulation, and hormonal
regulation.
When opiates are
prescribed by a physician for the treatment
of pain and are taken in the prescribed dosage,
they are safe and there is little chance
of addiction. However, when opiates are abused
and taken in excessive doses, addiction can
result. Findings from animal research indicate
that, like cocaine and other abused drugs,
opiates can also activate the brain's reward
system. When a person injects, sniffs, or
orally ingests heroin (or morphine), the drug
travels quickly to the brain through the
bloodstream.
Once
in the brain, the heroin is rapidly converted
to morphine, which then activates opiate
receptors located throughout the brain, including
within the reward system. (Note: Because
of its chemical structure, heroin penetrates
the brain more quickly than other opiates,
which is probably why many addicts prefer
heroin.) Within the reward system, the morphine
activates opiate receptors in the VTA, nucleus
accumbens, and cerebral cortex (refer to
the Introduction for information on the reward
system). Research suggests that stimulation
of opiate receptors by morphine results in
feelings of reward and activates the pleasure circuit by causing greater amounts
of dopamine to be released within the nucleus
accumbens. This causes an intense euphoria,
or rush, that lasts only briefly and is followed
by a few hours of a relaxed, contented state.
This excessive release of dopamine and stimulation
of the reward system can lead to addiction.
Opiates also act directly on the respiratory
center in the brainstem, where they cause
a slowdown in activity. This results in
a decrease in breathing rate. Excessive
amounts of an opiate, like heroin, can
cause the respiratory centers to shut down
breathing altogether. When someone overdoses
on heroin, it is the action of heroin in
the brainstem respiratory centers that
can cause the person to stop breathing
and die.
As mentioned earlier,
the brain itself produces endorphins that
have an important role in the relief or modulation
of pain. Sometimes, though, particularly
when pain is severe, the brain does not
produce enough endorphins to provide pain
relief. Fortunately, opiates, such as morphine
are very powerful pain relieving medications.
When used properly under the care of a
physician, opiates can relieve severe pain
without causing addiction.
Feelings of
pain are produced when specialized nerves
are activated by trauma to some part of
the body, either through injury or illness.
These specialized nerves, which are located
throughout the body, carry the pain message
to the spinal cord. After reaching the
spinal cord, the message is relayed to
other neurons, some of which carry it to
the brain. Opiates help to relieve pain
by acting in both the spinal cord and brain.
At the level of the spinal cord, opiates
interfere with the transmission of the
pain messages between neurons and therefore
prevent them from reaching the brain. This
blockade of pain messages protects a person
from experiencing too much pain. This is
known as analgesia.
Opiates also act
in the brain to help relieve pain, but the
way in which they accomplish this is different
than in the spinal cord.
There are several
areas in the brain that are involved in
interpreting pain messages and in subjective
responses to pain. These brain regions
are what allow a person to know he or she
is experiencing pain and that it is unpleasant.
Opiates also act in these brain regions,
but they don't block the pain messages
themselves. Rather, they change the subjective
experience of the pain. This is why a person
receiving morphine for pain may say that
they still feel the pain but that it doesn't
bother them anymore.
Although
endorphins are not always adequate to relieve
pain, they are very important for survival.
If an animal or person is injured and needs
to escape a harmful situation, it would
be difficult to do so while experiencing
severe pain. However, endorphins that are
released immediately following an injury
can provide enough pain relief to allow
escape from a harmful situation. Later,
when it is safe, the endorphin levels decrease
and intense pain may be felt. This also
is important for survival. If the endorphins
continued to blunt the pain, it would be
easy to ignore an injury and then not seek
medical care.
There are several
types of opiate receptors, including the
delta, mu, and kappa receptors. Each of these
three receptors is involved in controlling
different brain functions. For example,
opiates and endorphins are able to block
pain signals by binding to the mu receptor
site. The powerful new technology of cloning
has enabled scientists to copy the genes
that make each of these receptors. This
in turn is allowing researchers to conduct
laboratory studies to better understand
how opiates act in the brain and, more
specifically, how opiates interact with
each opiate receptor to produce their effects.
This information may eventually lead to
more effective treatments for pain and
opiate addiction.
For more information,
please call
(310) 205-0808 or (888) 987-HOPE during business
hours or send
us a confidential email.
For after hours and weekends, please call (310)
927-7155.