The Interior and Exterior Stimuli that Cause Pleasure

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It is truly amazing how the brain works and reacts to stimuli that people find the most pleasure in. There is one part of the brain that controls the pleasure that the body feels through various actions such as sex, drugs, and even eating! The brain is working in more ways than one can imagine behind the scenes and this is what makes the human body such an amazing instrument. But sometimes the body makes it too good of a thing and it turns into addiction. There is a reward system that controls the feeling of pleasure through stimuli that can be physical such having sex or using drugs and mental such thinking about a significant other. These exterior and interior stimuli will be described, explained and furthermore, the effects of the stimulus when they are triggered will be described as well.
If a stimulus can cause so much change in the body then what is it? A stimulus is a change in the internal and external environment detected by the body. The stimulus triggers the brain to release dopamine to give us pleasurable rewards when engage in behavior that people find pleasurable. Our ability to “feel good” involves brain neurotransmitters in this reward system. This reward system consists of dopamine-releasing neurons in areas of the brain called the ventral tegmental area (VTA), the nucleus accumbens, and the amygdala. The VTA dopamine system is strongly associated with the reward system of the brain. Dopamine is released in areas such as the nucleus accumbens and prefrontal cortex as a result of rewarding experiences such as food, sex, and neutral stimuli that become associated with them.
The source of this dopamine is primarily comes from the VTA, although the substantia nigra may also contribute. Electrical stimulation of the ...

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...a prolonged period of time. This sensation is followed by increase heart rate, blood pressure, and sexual appetite. Dopamine uptake continues to be blocked by constant use of cocaine as the system releases less and less dopamine and the reward system goes dry. The cocaine user becomes anxious and unable to experience pleasure without the drug. Consequently, the postsynaptic cells become hypersensitive and sprout new receptors in a desperate effort to pick up dopamine signals. A vicious cycle of addiction begins and cocaine is needed to experience pleasure as it suppresses dopamine release even more. Dopamine alone is not enough to maintain addiction, glutamate, which plays an important role in learning, is required to maintain addiction. Glutamate signaling seems to cause more permanent changes in the brain that leads to the drug-seeking behaviors elicited by users.

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