Why Is Crack Cocaine So Addicting?
by dbking
Question by Emily: Why is crack cocaine so addicting?
Why is crack cocaine so addicting?
Best answer:
Answer by Rob G
It has to do with dopamine.
According to this article I am quoting, it works like this.
Cocaine is a highly addictive substance. People who take it can become physically and psychologically dependant upon it to the point where they can’t control their cravings. Researchers have found that cocaine-addicted monkeys will press a bar more than 12,000 times to get a single dose of it. As soon as they get it, they will start pressing the bar for more.
Crack and other addictive drugs chemically alter a part of the brain called the reward system. As mentioned previously, when people smoke crack, the drug traps the chemical dopamine in the spaces between nerve cells. Dopamine creates the feelings of pleasure we get from enjoyable activities such as eating and having sex. But in crack users, dopamine keeps stimulating those cells, creating a “high” — a euphoric feeling that lasts anywhere from five to 15 minutes. But then the drug begins to wear off, leaving the person feeling let-down and depressed, resulting in a desire to smoke more crack in order to feel good again.
The brain responds to the dopamine overload of the crack high by either destroying some of it, making less of it or shutting down its receptors. The result is that, after taking the drug for a while, crack users become less sensitive to it and find that they must take more and more of it to achieve the desired effect. Eventually, they cannot stop taking the drug because their brains have been “rewired” — they actually need it in order to function. How long does it take to become addicted? That varies from person to person, and an exact number is difficult to pin down, especially when physical addiction is paired with psychological addition.
Of course, not everyone reacts the same way to extended use. Some users actually become more sensitive to crack as they take it. Some people die after taking a very small amount because of this increased sensitization.
When an addicted person stops taking crack, there is a “crash.” He or she experiences the symptoms of withdrawal, including:
* Depression
* Anxiety
* Intense cravings for the drug
* Irritability
* Agitation
* Exhaustion
* Anger
Holder Endorses Proposal to Reduce Drug Sentences
In January, the Justice Department issued a call encouraging low-level criminals serving lengthy sentences on crack cocaine charges to apply for clemency. Since the late 1970s, the prison population in the United States has ballooned into the world's …
Read more on New York Times
Marion Barry weighs in on Vincent Gray scandal
WASHINGTON (AP) — Former District of Columbia Mayor Marion Barry was re-elected despite a prison sentence for smoking crack cocaine. But Barry says he's not sure about Mayor Vincent Gray's political future amid federal allegations that Gray knew about …
Read more on Sioux City Journal
What Janet Mock Can Teach Us About Womanhood and 'Realness'
For example, there's a passage early in the book when she's describing her father, who we learn later in the book was addicted to crack cocaine. Her father spent much of her childhood trying to fix her. Years after, he explained to her that “he took it …
Read more on RH Reality Check
Find More Crack Cocaine Quotes Information…
- Conservative Sentencing Reform: Politically Savvy, Morally Right
- Can You Go to a Regular Hospital to Get Off Drugs?
- Teen Severs Arm 'at the Elbow' While Cleaning Pasta-Maker at Italian Restaurant
- Other Therapeutic Options for Drug Dependents
- 6 City Cops Put on Leave as Beating of Suspect Is Probed
- 'Take Back Day' to Crack Down on Prescription Drug Abuse
- Poliovirus Kills College Student's Brain Tumor
- Supreme Court to Weigh Cellphone Searches
- Dating a Recovering Alcoholic?
- Morphine Addiction and Morphine Abuse
- Heroin on Campus
- The Great 'Yaba' Epidemic
- Who Invented Crack Cocaine??????