Source: American Demographics Magazine Author: Matthew Klein Contact: http://www.demographics.com/ WHY DRUGS PLEASE HUMANS In 1995, 12.8 million Americans reported that they had used illicit drugs in the previous month, according to the National Household Survey on Drug Abuse. This number is down considerably from a peak of 25 million in 1979, which is a positive sign. But reducing the number to zero may be an impossible goal, according to new research by Randolph Nesse, a psychiatrist at the University of Michigan Institute for Social Research and Medical School. Most drugs of abuse work on ancient brain mechanisms that may have evolved between 600 million and 1 billion years ago. The drugs convey to the system a health benefit that has not occurred. "When a recent article suggested that marijuana worked on dopamine receptors in a similar way to cocaine, some critics said, 'but so does sex, and so does chocolate,'" says Nesse. "And they do. But when you stimulate with a natural substance, there are built-in dampening mechanisms that are bypassed when substances work directly on the brain." The refinement of modern drugs amplifies the problem. "Drugs have been with us for a long time," says Nesse. "But there previously has not been the purity, availability, and delivery we have now. It's almost like a new virus that we haven't evolved defenses to yet." For more information on Nesse's research, see "Psychoactive Drug Use in Evolutionary Perspective," in the October 3, 1997 Science, available at http://www.sciencemag.org. Copyright 1998 © Cowles Business Media.