Effects of Drug Abuse
and Addiction
By Dr. Fourkan Ali
Drugs are chemicals. Different drugs, because of their chemical
structures, can affect the body in different ways. In fact, some drugs can even
change a person's body and brain in ways that last long after the person has
stopped taking drugs, maybe even permanently.
Depending on the drug, it can enter the human body in a number
of ways, including injection, inhalation, and ingestion. The method of how it
enters the body impacts on how the drug affects the person. For example:
injection takes the drug directly into the blood stream, providing more
immediate effects; while ingestion requires the drug to pass through the
digestive system, delaying the effects.
Most abused drugs directly or indirectly target the brain's
reward system by flooding the circuit with dopamine. Dopamine is a
neurotransmitter present in regions of the brain that regulate movement,
emotion, cognition, motivation, and feelings of pleasure. When drugs enter the
brain, they can actually change how the brain performs its jobs. These changes
are what lead to compulsive drug use, the hallmark of addiction.
Know The Facts
- Illicit
drug users make over 527,000 costly emergency room visits each year for
drug related problems.
- One dollar
out of every $14 of the nation's health care bill is spent to treat those
suffering from smoking-related illnesses.
- Drug
offenders account for more than one-third of the growth in the state
prison population and more than 80 percent of the increase in the number
of federal prison inmates since 1985.
- More than
75 percent of domestic violence victims report that their assailant had
been drinking or using illicit drugs at the time of the incident.
- Substance
abuse and addiction are fully treatable.
- 45% of individuals
with an untreated substance use disorder commit suicide.*
Injuries
More deaths, illnesses and disabilities stem from substance
abuse than from any other preventable health condition. Today, one in four
deaths is attributable to illicit drug use. People who live with substance
dependence have a higher risk of all bad outcomes including unintentional
injuries, accidents, risk of domestic violence, medical problems, and death.
Health Problems
The impact of drug abuse and dependence can be far-reaching,
affecting almost every organ in the human body. Drug use can:
·
Weaken the immune
system, increasing susceptibility to infections.
·
Cause cardiovascular
conditions ranging from abnormal heart rate to heart attacks. Injected drugs
can also lead to collapsed veins and infections of the blood vessels and heart
valves.
·
Cause nausea, vomiting
and abdominal pain.
·
Cause the liver to
have to work harder, possibly causing significant damage or liver failure.
·
Cause seizures, stroke
and widespread brain damage that can impact all aspects of daily life by
causing problems with memory, attention and decision-making, including
sustained mental confusion and permanent brain damage.
·
Produce global body
changes such as breast development in men, dramatic fluctuations in appetite
and increases in body temperature, which may impact a variety of health
conditions.
Effects On The Brain
Although initial drug use may be voluntary, drugs have been
shown to alter brain chemistry, which interferes with an individual's ability
to make decisions and can lead to compulsive craving, seeking and use. This
then becomes a substance dependency.
·
All drugs of abuse -
nicotine, cocaine, marijuana, and others - effect the brain's
"reward" circuit, which is part of the limbic system.
·
Drugs hijack this
"reward" system, causing unusually large amounts of dopamine to flood
the system.
·
This flood of dopamine
is what causes the "high" or euphoria associated with drug abuse.
Behavioral Problems
·
Paranoia
·
Aggressiveness
·
Hallucinations
·
Addiction
·
Impaired Judgment
·
Impulsiveness
·
Loss of Self-Control
Birth Defects
Nearly 4 percent of pregnant women in the United States use
illicit drugs such as marijuana, cocaine, Ecstasy and other amphetamines, and
heroin1. These and other illicit drugs may pose various risks for pregnant
women and their babies. Some of these drugs can cause a baby to be born too
small or too soon, or to have withdrawal symptoms, birth defects or learning
and behavioral problems. Additionally, illicit drugs may be prepared with
impurities that may be harmful to a pregnancy.
Finally, pregnant women who use illicit drugs may engage in
other unhealthy behaviors that place their pregnancy at risk, such as having
extremely poor nutrition or developing sexually transmitted infections.
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