Uncovering the Brain's Pathways Hijacked by Addiction

TL;DR Summary
Researchers have discovered how drugs like cocaine and morphine manipulate the brain's natural reward system, leading to compulsive drug-seeking behaviors. By tracking neurons in the nucleus accumbens, the study found that drugs disrupt the same brain cells responsible for processing natural rewards, offering potential targets for new addiction treatments. The research also identified the mTORC1 signaling pathway and the Rheb gene as potential therapeutic targets, shedding new light on the neural underpinnings of drug addiction.
- How Drugs Hijack the Brain's Reward System Neuroscience News
- Cocaine seems to hijack brain pathways that prioritise food and water New Scientist
- A common pathway in the brain that enables addictive drugs to hijack natural reward processing identified Medical Xpress
- Newly Discovered Brain Pathway Sheds Light On Addiction Mirage News
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