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What causes opioid addiction, and why is it so tough to combat? - Mike Davis

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    More than 3,000 years ago,
    a flower began to appear in remedies
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    in Ancient Egyptian medical texts.
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    Across the Mediterranean,
    the ancient Minoans
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    likely found ways to use
    the same plant for its high.
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    Both ancient civilizations
    were on to something—
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    opium,
    an extract of the poppy in question,
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    can both induce pleasure
    and reduce pain.
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    Though opium has remained
    in use ever since,
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    it wasn’t until the 19th century
    that one of its chemical compounds,
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    morphine, was identified
    and isolated for medical use.
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    Morphine, codeine, and other substances
    made directly from the poppy
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    are called opiates.
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    In the 20th century, drug companies
    created a slew of synthetic substances
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    similar to these opiates,
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    including heroin, hydrocodone,
    oxycodone, and fentanyl.
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    Whether synthetic or derived from opium,
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    these compounds
    are collectively known as opioids.
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    Synthetic or natural, legal or illicit,
    opioid drugs
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    are very effective painkillers,
    but they are also highly addictive.
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    In the 1980s and 90s,
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    pharmaceutical companies began
    to market opioid painkillers aggressively,
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    actively downplaying
    their addictive potential
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    to both the medical community
    and the public.
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    The number of opioid painkillers
    prescriptions skyrocketed,
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    and so did cases of opioid addiction,
    beginning a crisis that continues today.
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    To understand why opioids
    are so addictive,
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    it helps to trace how these drugs affect
    the human body from the first dose,
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    through repeated use,
    to what happens when long-term use stops.
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    Each of these drugs
    has slightly different chemistry,
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    but all act on the body’s opioid system by
    binding to opioid receptors in the brain.
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    The body’s endorphins temper pain signals
    by binding to these receptors,
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    and opioid drugs bind
    much more strongly, for longer.
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    So opioid drugs can manage much more
    severe pain than endorphins can.
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    Opioid receptors also influence everything
    from mood to normal bodily functions.
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    With these functions, too,
    opioids’ binding strength and durability
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    mean their effects
    are more pronounced and widespread
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    than those of the body’s
    natural signaling molecules.
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    When a drug binds to opioid receptors,
    it triggers the release of dopamine,
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    which is linked to feelings of pleasure
    and may be responsible
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    for the sense of euphoria
    that characterizes an opioid high.
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    At the same time, opioids suppress
    the release of noradrenaline,
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    which influences wakefulness, breathing,
    digestion, and blood pressure.
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    A therapeutic dose decreases noradrenaline
    enough to cause side effects
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    like constipation.
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    At higher doses opioids can decrease heart
    and breathing rates to dangerous levels,
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    causing loss of consciousness
    and even death.
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    Over time, the body starts
    to develop a tolerance for opioids.
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    It may decrease its number
    of opioid receptors,
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    or the receptors may become
    less responsive.
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    To experience the same release of dopamine
    and resulting mood effects as before,
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    people have to take
    larger and larger doses—
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    a cycle that leads to physical dependence
    and addiction.
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    As people take more opioids
    to compensate for tolerance,
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    noradrenaline levels
    become lower and lower,
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    to a point that could impact
    basic bodily functions.
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    The body compensates by increasing
    its number of noradrenaline receptors
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    so it can detect much smaller amounts
    of noradrenaline.
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    This increased sensitivity
    to noradrenaline
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    allows the body
    to continue functioning normally—
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    in fact, it becomes dependent on opioids
    to maintain the new balance.
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    When someone who is physically dependent
    on opioids stops taking them abruptly,
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    that balance is disrupted.
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    Noradrenaline levels can increase
    within a day of ceasing opioid use.
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    But the body takes much longer
    to get rid of
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    all the extra noradrenaline receptors
    it made.
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    That means there’s a period of time
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    when the body is too sensitive
    to noradrenaline.
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    This oversensitivity causes
    withdrawal symptoms,
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    including muscle aches, stomach pains,
    fever, and vomiting.
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    Though temporary, opioid withdrawal
    can be incredibly debilitating.
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    In serious cases, someone in withdrawal
    can be violently ill
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    for days or even weeks.
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    People who are addicted to opioids
    aren't necessarily using the drugs
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    to get high anymore,
    but rather to avoid being sick.
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    Many risk losing wages or even jobs
    while in withdrawal,
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    or may not have anyone to take care
    of them during withdrawal.
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    If someone goes back
    to using opioids later,
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    they can be at particularly high risk
    for overdose,
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    because what would have been a standard
    dose while their tolerance was high,
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    can now be lethal.
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    Since 1980, accidental deaths
    from opioid overdose
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    have grown exponentially
    in the United States,
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    and opioid addictions have
    also exploded around the world.
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    While opioid painkiller prescriptions
    are becoming more closely regulated,
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    cases of overdose and addiction
    are still increasing,
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    especially among younger people.
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    Many of the early cases of addiction
    were middle-aged people
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    who became addicted to painkillers
    they had been prescribed,
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    or received from friends
    and family members with prescriptions.
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    Today, young people are often introduced
    to prescription opioid drugs in those ways
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    but move on to heroin or illicit
    synthetic opioids that are cheaper
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    and easier to come by.
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    Beyond tighter regulation
    of opioid painkillers,
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    what can we do to reverse the growing
    rates of addiction and overdose?
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    A drug called naloxone is currently
    our best defense against overdose.
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    Naloxone binds to opioid receptors
    but doesn’t activate them.
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    It blocks other opioids
    from binding to the receptors,
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    and even knocks them off the receptors
    to reverse an overdose.
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    Opioid addiction
    is rarely a stand-alone illness;
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    frequently, people with opioid dependence
    are also struggling
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    with a mental health condition.
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    There are both inpatient
    and outpatient programs that combine
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    medication, health services,
    and psychotherapy.
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    But many of these programs
    are very expensive,
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    and the more affordable options
    can have long waiting lists.
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    They also often require complete
    detoxification from opioids
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    before beginning treatment.
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    Both the withdrawal period and the common
    months-long stay in a facility
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    can be impossible for people who risk
    losing jobs and housing in that timeframe.
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    Opioid maintenance programs aim
    to address some of these obstacles
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    and eliminate opioid abuse
    using a combination
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    of medication and behavior therapy.
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    These programs avoid withdrawal symptoms
    with drugs
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    that bind to opioid receptors
    but don’t have the psychoactive effects
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    of painkillers, heroin,
    and other commonly abused opioids.
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    Methadone and buprenorphine
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    are the primary opioid maintenance
    drugs available today,
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    but doctors need a special waiver
    to prescribe them—
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    even though no specific training
    or certification
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    is required to prescribe
    opioid painkillers.
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    Buprenorphine can be so scarce
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    that there’s even
    a growing black market for it.
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    There’s still a long way to go
    with combating opioid addiction,
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    but there are great resources
    for making sense of the treatment options.
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    If you or someone you know is struggling
    with opioid use in the United States,
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    the Department of Health
    and Human Services
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    operates a helpline: 800-662-4357
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    and a database of more than 14,000
    substance abuse facilities in the US:
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    www.hhs.gov/opioids
Title:
What causes opioid addiction, and why is it so tough to combat? - Mike Davis
Speaker:
Mike Davis
Description:

View full lesson: https://ed.ted.com/lessons/what-causes-opioid-addiction-and-why-is-it-so-tough-to-combat-mike-davis

In the 1980s and 90s, pharmaceutical companies began to market opioid painkillers aggressively, while actively downplaying their addictive potential. The number of prescriptions skyrocketed, and so did cases of addiction, beginning a crisis that continues today.
 What makes opioids so addictive? Mike Davis explains what we can do to reverse the skyrocketing rates of addiction and overdose.

Lesson by Mike Davis, directed by Good Bad Habits.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
08:19

English subtitles

Revisions