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-   -   Addictions article in TIME (http://www.cougarguard.com/forum/showthread.php?t=9750)

8ballrollin 07-07-2007 11:13 PM

Addictions article in TIME
 
Mike, this was posted on CB, it’s an article in TIME on addiction. Have you read it?

http://www.time.com/time/magazine/ar...640436,00.html

I thought this was interesting:

"One important discovery: evidence is building to support the 90-day rehabilitation model, which was stumbled upon by AA (new members are advised to attend a meeting a day for the first 90 days) and is the duration of a typical stint in a drug-treatment program. It turns out that this is just about how long it takes for the brain to reset itself and shake off the immediate influence of a drug. Researchers at Yale University have documented what they call the sleeper effect--a gradual re-engaging of proper decision making and analytical functions in the brain's prefrontal cortex--after an addict has abstained for at least 90 days.

This work has led to research on cognitive enhancers, or compounds that may amplify connections in the prefrontal cortex to speed up the natural reversal. Such enhancement would give the higher regions of the brain a fighting chance against the amygdala, a more basal region that plays a role in priming the dopamine-reward system when certain cues suggest imminent pleasure--anything from the sight of white powder that looks like cocaine to spending time with friends you used to drink with. It's that conditioned reflex--identical to the one that caused Ivan Pavlov's famed dog to salivate at the ringing of a bell after it learned to associate the sound with food--that unleashes a craving. And it's that phenomenon that was the purpose of my brain scans at McLean, one of the world's premier centers for addiction research."

Can the brain really re-set in just 90 days?

MikeWaters 07-08-2007 12:16 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by 8ballrollin (Post 98713)
Can the brain really re-set in just 90 days?

Haven't read it. Don't know if a brain can "reset". Don't even know what that means really.

This does support the disease model of addiction however.


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