Drug abuse and addiction rank among the world's most destructive health problems. A positive environment can keep anyone away from substance abuse.

In the study published in the journal Neuropharmacology, scientists tracked cocaine cravings in more than 70 adult male mice and found that those rodents who received a nine-day cognitive training program were less likely than their counterparts to seek solace in a chamber where they had been given cocaine. The training program included exploration, learning and finding hidden tasty morsels.
"We have compelling behavioral evidence that self-directed exploration and learning altered their reward systems so that when cocaine was experienced it made less of an impact on their brain," Wilbrecht said.
By contrast, mice who were not intellectually challenged and/or whose activities and diets were restricted were eager to return to the quarters where they had been injected with cocaine.
Drug abuse and addiction rank among the world's more costly, destructive and seemingly insurmountable problems.
Previous studies have found that poverty, trauma, mental illness and other environmental and physiological stressors can alter the brain's reward circuitry and make us more susceptible to substance abuse.
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Source-IANS