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Healthaddiction

Adderall can lead to a cycle of dependence in people who don’t really need it. For those who do, it can be a wonder drug. A neuroscientist explains why

By
Habibeh Khoshbouei
Habibeh Khoshbouei
and
The Conversation
The Conversation
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By
Habibeh Khoshbouei
Habibeh Khoshbouei
and
The Conversation
The Conversation
Down Arrow Button Icon
April 7, 2023, 12:09 PM ET
30mg tablets of Shire Plc's Adderall XR are arranged in a Cambridge, Massachusetts pharmacy on Tuesday, August 15, 2006
30mg tablets of Shire Plc's Adderall XR are arranged in a Cambridge, Massachusetts pharmacy on Tuesday, August 15, 2006Jb Reed/Bloomberg via Getty Images

The nationwide shortages of Adderall that began in fall 2022 have brought renewed attention to the beleaguered drug, which is used to treat attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder and narcolepsy.

Adderall became a go-to drug for ADHD over the past two decades but quickly came under fire because of overprescription and misuse. In some cases, people who do not have a proper ADHD diagnosis are using the drug for its perceived cognitive-enhancing effects, leading to an increase in its abuse rates and drug dependence.

Not only has misuse of Adderall led to its stigmatization as a drug of abuse, it can also lead to negative physical side effects, including cardiovascular complications, sleep disturbances, and addiction.

I am a neuroscientist with a focus on studying the dopamine system in both the brain and peripheral immune system. My research specifically examines the short- and long-term effects of psychostimulant drugs like methamphetamine on a protein that transports dopamine, a chemical messenger that is not properly regulated in people with ADHD.

Through this work, I aim to better understand the complex interplay between drug use and the dopamine system, which may ultimately lead to new treatments for drug addiction and related disorders. Unfortunately, I’ve seen that the stigma and false narratives surrounding Adderall have made it more difficult for patients who need this medication to access it.

How Adderall treats ADHD

Adderall is the commercial name of a mixture of a few types of amphetamines, which are stimulants that increase dopamine levels in the brain to help address deficits in those with ADHD.

The underlying processes that lead to ADHD are poorly understood. The core symptoms include hyperactivity, inattention, mood swings, temper, disorganization, stress sensitivity and impulsivity.

Multiple studies suggest that these symptoms may be due to the improper regulation of dopamine levels in the brain.

Neurons have a protein called dopamine transporter that normally functions like a vacuum cleaner that sucks the chemical into the neuron. But people with ADHD have a leaky dopamine transporter, meaning that dopamine gets pushed out of the neuron into the surrounding environment of the synapse – the space between neurons where chemical messages are passed back and forth.

Adderall is thought to work by blocking this leaky protein, preventing dopamine from spewing out of the neuron through the dopamine transporter. This is thought to stabilize dopamine levels in the brain of ADHD patients, thus reducing their debilitating symptoms. Adderall helps stabilize dopamine levels in the brains of people with ADHD.

The paradoxical effects of Adderall

People who don’t have ADHD usually have a functioning dopamine transporter that is able to maintain balanced levels of this chemical inside and outside of the neuron. When they use amphetamines like Adderall, however, the drug can disrupt the transporter’s ability to remove dopamine from the synapse as well as cause it to work backward and push dopamine out of the neuron. This results in too much dopamine in the synapse, which can lead to feelings of euphoria and increased wakefulness.

While these effects might sound good on the surface, misusing the drug is problematic because it can lead to cardiovascular problems. Current evidence suggests that Adderall doesn’t significantly increase cardiovascular disease risk for people with ADHD. But people without ADHD who misuse Adderall can develop a dependence on the drug and take it at dangerous dosages.

Adderall misuse doesn’t just involve a harmful cycle that reinforces its use because of its rewarding effects. It also reinforces dependence by causing negative emotional states some researchers have dubbed the “dark side” of addiction. Excessive activation of the brain’s reward system disrupts how it normally functions, resulting in a decrease in overall sensitivity to reward signals. It also leads to persistent activation of the brain’s stress systems, which results in feelings of anxiety and restlessness in the absence of the drug.

Adderall works when you need it

Other drugs like methylphenidate, known by the brand name Ritalin, also treat ADHD by targeting the dopamine transporter.

While Adderall and Ritalin reduce the hyperactive, impulsive and inattentive symptoms in people with ADHD by stabilizing dopamine levels, they do so using different mechanisms. Ritalin reduces the dopamine transporter’s leakiness by directly blocking entry. Adderall also reduces leakiness, but by competing with dopamine for entry into the transporter.

In people without ADHD, both Ritalin and Adderall significantly increase brain dopamine and induce euphoria, hyperactivity and other symptoms. However, both drugs are equally beneficial to patients with ADHD.

To treat anxiety, depression, narcolepsy and other neuropsychiatric diseases, millions of patients worldwide take medication that targets the transport of dopamine and other neurotransmitters like norepinephrine and serotonin, but their use is not stigmatized by recreational misuse.

Because of the euphoria-inducing properties and hyperactivity that Adderall can induce for those who do not need the drug, its misuse and abuse have unfortunately promoted false narratives about Adderall for those who do need it. For ADHD patients, however, it can reduce negative symptoms and greatly improve quality of life.

Habibeh Khoshbouei, Professor of Neuroscience, University of Florida

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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