Oxycodone vs. Endorphin: How Drugs Hijack Your Brain's Mu Opioid Receptors
A board-certified internal medicine physician reviews how opioid drugs change the brain and lead to dependence by taking over your brain's mu opioid receptors. We review how opioid addiction is typically a chronic disease of the brain requiring long-term treatment.

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Opioid Drugs, Part 1: Mechanism of Action

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Prescribing Buprenorphine for Chronic Pain - 12.8.2020

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Addiction Neuroscience 101

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How to Focus to Change Your Brain | Huberman Lab Essentials

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ADD/ADHD | What Is Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder?

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Opioid Tragedy: Inside the Fentanyl Crisis | Ten Dollar Death Trip | ENDEVR Documentary

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Opioid Drugs, Part 2: Addiction and Overdose

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Dopamine Pathways, Antipsychotics, and EPS

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I was in opioid withdrawal for a month — here's what I learned | Travis Rieder | TEDxMidAtlantic

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OxyContin patients, then and now

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Psychedelics Don't Distort Reality — They Reveal How Your Brain Constructs It

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How to Rewire Your Brain & Learn Faster | Dr. Michael Kilgard

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Opioids, Pain, Addiction, and the Brain - Saving The Brain 2017

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Painkiller: Inside the Opioid Crisis

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Addiction Neuroscience 101

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The Neurobiology of Addiction Addiction 101 in Olson

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Antineoplastic Agents | Clinical Medicine

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How America Got Hooked on Opioids | The War on Drugs

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The agony of opioid withdrawal — and what doctors should tell patients about it | Travis Rieder

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