The Brighterside of News on MSN
Immune signal in the brain may offer new target for treating meth addiction
Methamphetamine addiction has a way of looping back on itself. A rush of pleasure pulls you in, cravings follow, and the brain learns that the drug is the fastest route to reward. Yet scientists still ...
Why someone becomes addicted to a substance has long baffled scientists and philosophers. Now leading researchers are getting the clearest picture yet of how addiction works in the brain and body.
A new doctoral dissertation shows that gambling disorder is linked to brain networks involved in self-control and brain ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Alcohol hijacks your brain and shatters it into chaotic local fragments
Alcohol does not simply relax the mind. It rewires it. With repeated use, drinking can splinter the brain’s carefully coordinated networks into scattered, competing circuits that chase the next drink ...
Substance use disorders (SUDs) present a formidable challenge to public health globally, with recent statistics from the U.S.
To explore these neural differences, the researchers used a computational approach called “network control theory” to measure how the brain transitions between different patterns of activity during ...
Mindfulness, holistic care, and neuroscience are reshaping addiction treatment and offering hope for recovery. Mindfulness, holistic care, and neuroscience are reshaping addiction treatment and ...
Key Takeaways Evidence-based therapies for alcohol addiction have scientific validation behind them, making them more ...
The landscape of mental health support for individuals grappling with gambling addiction is undergoing a significant transformation, particularly in regions where regulated betting markets are ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results