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A still image shows the BrainGate
implant and percutaneuous (it rests on the skull and through the skin on
the scalp) pedestal to which a computer cable is attached that leads to
the computers that process the brain's signals.(Xinhua/Reuters
Photo) Photo
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BEIJING, Feb. 26 (Xinhuanet) -- Scientists in Ireland
found regions of the brain that may hold the key to why some cocaine users
become addicts while others just take the drug socially, media reported Tuesday.
Researchers said brain scans of cocaine users while
they performed simple computer tasks showed changes in the part of the brain
responsible for controlling behavior and making appropriate decisions.
This could explain why some people find it easier to
quit than others and may shed light on long-term addiction, said Hugh Garavan, a
cognitive neuroscientist at Trinity College Dublin.
"Most people who try to quit drugs relapse," Garavan
said. "It might have to do with how intact these brain regions are."
Garavan and colleagues used MRI scans to show that
cocaine users had reduced neural activity marked by reduced blood flow to the
part of the brain involved in things like problem solving, decision making and
controlling behavior. Some people were administered cocaine in the experiments.
"This research helps us move away from thinking of
drug dependence as a moral weakness and allows us to see it as more of a medical
condition."
"One would hope this research would guide the
development of new treatments including the development of pharmacological
solutions to addiction," Garavan said.
Cocaine, initially used in patent medicines,
beverages and tonics around the turn of the 20th Century, is a drug that in
powdered form can be snorted or dissolved in water and injected. Its derivative
crack cocaine is even more powerful.
An estimated 1 to 3 percent of adults in developed
countries use the drug, which has been linked to a number of medical,
psychological and social problems including crime, violence and the spread of
diseases like AIDS and hepatitis, according to the World Health Organisation.
(Agencies)