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Nexius
Ruler


Registered: 06/24/07
Posts: 3,960
Loc: Earth
Last seen: 1 year, 3 months
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Ritalin boosts learning by increasing brain plasticity
#12170600 - 03/09/10 12:02 PM (2 years, 2 months ago) |
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Taken from http://www.physorg.com/news187187471.html
Very interesting article
Quote:
Ritalin boosts learning by increasing brain plasticity March 7, 2010 Doctors treat millions of children with Ritalin every year to improve their ability to focus on tasks, but scientists now report that Ritalin also directly enhances the speed of learning.
In animal research, the scientists showed for the first time that Ritalin boosts both of these cognitive abilities by increasing the activity of the neurotransmitter dopamine deep inside the brain. Neurotransmitters are the chemical messengers neurons use to communicate with each other. They release the molecule, which then docks onto receptors of other neurons. The research demonstrated that one type of dopamine receptor aids the ability to focus, and another type improves the learning itself. The scientists also established that Ritalin produces these effects by enhancing brain plasticity - strengthening communication between neurons where they meet at the synapse. Research in this field has accelerated as scientists have recognized that our brains can continue to form new connections - remain plastic - throughout life. "Since we now know that Ritalin improves behavior through two specific types of neurotransmitter receptors, the finding could help in the development of better targeted drugs, with fewer side effects, to increase focus and learning," said Antonello Bonci, MD, principal investigator at the Ernest Gallo Clinic and Research Center and professor of neurology at UCSF. The Gallo Center is affiliated with the UCSF Department of Neurology. Bonci is co-senior author of the paper, which will be published online in "Nature Neuroscience" on Sunday, March 7, 2010. Bonci and his colleagues showed that Ritalin's therapeutic action takes place in a brain region called the amygdala, an almond-shaped cluster of neurons known to be critical for learning and emotional memory. "We found that a dopamine receptor, known as the D2 receptor, controls the ability to stay focused on a task - the well-known benefit of Ritalin," said Patricia Janak, PhD, co-senior author on the paper. "But we also discovered that another dopamine receptor, D1, underlies learning efficiency."
Janak is a principal investigator at the Gallo Center and a UCSF associate professor of neurology. Lead author of the paper is Kay M. Tye, PhD, a postdoctoral scientist at the Gallo Center when the research was carried out. The research assessed the ability of rats to learn that they could get a sugar water reward when they received a signal - a flash of light and a sound. The scientists compared the behavior of animals receiving Ritalin with those that did not receive it, and found those receiving Ritalin learned much better. However, they also found that if they blocked the dopamine D1 receptors with drugs, Ritalin was unable to enhance learning. And if they blocked D2 receptors, Ritalin failed to improve focus. The experiments established the distinct role of each of the dopamine receptors in enabling Ritalin to enhance cognitive performance. In addition, animals that performed better after Ritalin treatment showed enhanced synaptic plasticity in the amygdala. Enhanced plasticity is essentially increased efficiency of neural transmission. The researchers confirmed this by measuring electrical activity in neurons in the amygdala after Ritalin treatment. The research confirmed that learning and focus were enhanced when Ritalin was administered to animals in doses comparable to those used therapeutically in children. "Although Ritalin is so frequently prescribed, it induces many brain changes, making it difficult to identify which of those changes improve learning." said Kay Tye. "By identifying the brain mechanisms underlying Ritalin's behavioral enhancements, we can better understand the action of Ritalin as well as the properties governing brain plasticity." Provided by University of California - San Francisco
-------------------- Light travels faster than sound, which is why some people appear bright, until you hear them speak
Edited by Nexius (03/09/10 12:03 PM)
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SS32
Stranger

Registered: 07/27/09
Posts: 894
Loc: elsewhere
Last seen: 28 days, 7 hours
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Re: Ritalin boosts learning by increasing brain plasticity [Re: Nexius]
#12170827 - 03/09/10 12:35 PM (2 years, 2 months ago) |
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All it did for me was make me angry as hell.
-------------------- Did he dream about dragons? Did he dream about deer? Did he whisper he names of friends who were near?
What songs did they play, and how far away? Why did he whisper, why did she scream?
What does the sound of a screen door mean?
Who talks on the hill? Who goes to the cellar, can you feel the chill? Where does the river, when will the wind?
How far are the mountains? Where do they end? Why would the church?
Did the service begin? Tell me who died, and tell me who cried.
Help me hide in the skin of a deer, my zippered-up bag in the mouth of a stag so swiftly I go through rows of does,
it flows, it flows, it flows, it flows all over the hill where the green grass grows.
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insomniatic_tripz
Space Cadet



Registered: 11/16/09
Posts: 201
Loc: Dreams
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Re: Ritalin boosts learning by increasing brain plasticity [Re: SS32]
#12170958 - 03/09/10 12:50 PM (2 years, 2 months ago) |
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That's a great find now we can prescribe crack the day kids hit their teens.
We should also pump our water with ritalin! No longer will America be the country of the ignorant. 'cause we'll be smart as fuck
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smokescreen
80's Transformer



Registered: 08/13/09
Posts: 807
Loc: north carolina
Last seen: 1 month, 6 days
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Re: Ritalin boosts learning by increasing brain plasticity [Re: insomniatic_tripz]
#12171049 - 03/09/10 01:02 PM (2 years, 2 months ago) |
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Im sure methamphetamine would work wonders in place of ritalin, but that doesn't mean we should give it to kids
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"Let's get together and feel alright" 
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piracetam
bioanalytical chemist


Registered: 05/03/08
Posts: 4,154
Loc: TX
Last seen: 1 day, 18 hours
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Re: Ritalin boosts learning by increasing brain plasticity [Re: smokescreen]
#12171082 - 03/09/10 01:07 PM (2 years, 2 months ago) |
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i gotta call BS. which big pharm company funded this study? how does blocking dopamine reuptake enhance plasticity? it's not a reuptake enhancer, big difference. "Enhanced plasticity is essentially increased efficiency of neural transmission." it's just not that simple extensive use of methylphenidate will cause big time downregulation of dopamine.
the AMPA modulators are probably more efficient for learning and cognition
-------------------- "It only takes 20 years for a liberal to become a conservative without changing a single idea.
In an evolving universe, who stands still moves backwards." ~R.A. Wilson
Edited by piracetam (03/09/10 01:23 PM)
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T-Rex
NY DrugResearch



 Registered: 04/05/08
Posts: 1,165
Loc: STRONG ISLAND
Last seen: 13 hours, 15 minutes
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Re: Ritalin boosts learning by increasing brain plasticity [Re: piracetam]
#12171644 - 03/09/10 02:25 PM (2 years, 2 months ago) |
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Ritalin makes me feel paronoid, jittery, hot and sweaty, and causes anxiety. Maybe it increases yourconcentration but how can I concentrate on something when feeling like im on shitty coke.
-------------------- "I grabbed a pile of dust, and holding it up, foolishly I asked for as many birthdays as the grains of dust, I forgot to ask they be years of youth"
"The only thing that comes to a sleeping man is dreams"
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ToiletDuk
Cat Psychiatrist



Registered: 05/16/03
Posts: 73,294
Loc: Earthfarm 1
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Re: Ritalin boosts learning by increasing brain plasticity [Re: T-Rex]
#12171736 - 03/09/10 02:37 PM (2 years, 2 months ago) |
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Quote:
T-Rex said: Ritalin makes me feel paronoid, jittery, hot and sweaty, and causes anxiety. Maybe it increases yourconcentration but how can I concentrate on something when feeling like im on shitty coke.
Yeah, I get pretty much the same. It's like a high-dose caffeine trip to me.
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bigkingjc
chillin.



Registered: 08/29/06
Posts: 50
Last seen: 1 year, 2 months
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Re: Ritalin boosts learning by increasing brain plasticity [Re: ToiletDuk]
#12173207 - 03/09/10 06:30 PM (2 years, 2 months ago) |
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yay for heroin
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ToiletDuk
Cat Psychiatrist



Registered: 05/16/03
Posts: 73,294
Loc: Earthfarm 1
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Re: Ritalin boosts learning by increasing brain plasticity [Re: bigkingjc]
#12173702 - 03/09/10 07:38 PM (2 years, 2 months ago) |
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And xanax!
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MyOwnReality
OrigionalPranksta


Registered: 04/11/05
Posts: 171
Loc: The Road to Everywhere
Last seen: 1 month, 9 days
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Re: Ritalin boosts learning by increasing brain plasticity [Re: ToiletDuk]
#12175051 - 03/09/10 11:37 PM (2 years, 2 months ago) |
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My personal experience actually confirms this. Has it every crossed your limited perspective that there are other drugs besides illegal ones that in some instances can help people? Meth-amphetamine's action is different from methylphenidate in that amphetamines both cause the release of dopamine and effect reuptake, while methylphenidate soley affects reuptake. When you flood the brain with chemicals and stop them from being reabsorbed you basically diminish the amount of dopamine available to the whole system over time, while with simple reuptake inhibition it just makes the dopamine in the synapse more available in the short term, allowing reuptake after the drug's effect has faded. In these same ways cocaine addicts become fairly normal after detox, where as methamphetamine addicts have much more intense long term effects.
That being said, any time one fucks with the brain chemistry of a developing brain the long term effects are hard to study and know for sure, but one thing I can say having been around many many people in the ADD and ADHD community is that ritalin is by far a more benign drug than the more widely prescribed, used and abused amphetamines like aderal, and dexodrin.
So quit hating just because a drug is backed by big pharma, LSD was once considered a pharmaceutical as well.
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