{"id":9385,"date":"2022-09-22T21:46:04","date_gmt":"2022-09-22T21:46:04","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/ultimatehealthreport.com\/in-defense-of-dopamine-an-endocannabinoid-story\/"},"modified":"2022-09-22T21:46:04","modified_gmt":"2022-09-22T21:46:04","slug":"in-defense-of-dopamine-an-endocannabinoid-story","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/ultimatehealthreport.com\/in-defense-of-dopamine-an-endocannabinoid-story\/","title":{"rendered":"In Defense of Dopamine: An Endocannabinoid Story"},"content":{"rendered":"


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\u201cIn skating over thin ice, our safety is in our speed.\u201d \u2013 Ralph Waldo Emerson<\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n

It\u2019s sad \u2013 intellectually dishonest even. For some reason, dopamine always gets put in the neurotransmitter box labeled \u2018addictions and stimulants\u2019. But this little amine is so much more.<\/p>\n

When a kitten is born, she comes with an inborn tendency to lick herself for cleaning. But she doesn\u2019t do a very good job at it, just nuzzling her paws with her tongue a bit. The instinct is there, but she needs encouragement from her environment. If separated from her mother, this kitten will never learn to clean herself properly \u2013 just a haphazard licking that will leave her forever mangy and bedraggled. But if mama cat encourages her and demonstrates the proper licking techniques for good hygiene, it\u2019s the dopamine that enables the learning of that lesson.<\/p>\n

Dopamine is the mother of learning \u2013 and the thrill of learning. Found in creatures as ancient as jellyfish, hydra, and corals, dopamine likely dates back 500 million years to the emergence of the first nervous systems. In every animal studied thus far, dopamine propels motor behaviors and rewards learning. Do you want to train a roundworm to navigate a maze? Give it a shot of dopamine as a prize.<\/p>\n

Vital to our motivation and our motor control, dopamine also helps with our executive function and enables our lactation and our sexual gratification. When our dopamine machinery goes awry, it leads to some terrible maladies, most notably Parkinson\u2019s disease.<\/p>\n

Dopamine is like the shark of our brains, much maligned as a cold predator of destruction, but in reality, it\u2019s a key regulator of our neural ocean.<\/p>\n

Dopamine in the Brain<\/h2>\n

Given the many known neural functions of dopamine, it\u2019s noteworthy that dopamine accomplishes so much from such a small base of command. Out of the 80+ billion neurons in the human brain, only around 400,000 of them are dopaminergic (dopamine producing). These exist predominantly in a spread across 11 cellular clusters running from the midbrain to the forebrain. But from these clusters, the axons of dopamine neurons project all over the brain to produce their wide-ranging effects.<\/p>\n