Coffee Addiction
Regular ingestion of the drug alters your brain’s chemical makeup, leading to fatigue, headaches and nausea if you try to quit.
Smithsonian Magazine
- Joseph Stromberg
    
            Within 24 hours of quitting the drug, your withdrawal 
symptoms begin. Initially, they’re subtle: The first thing you notice is
 that you feel mentally foggy, and lack alertness. Your muscles are 
fatigued, even when you haven’t done anything strenuous, and you suspect
 that you’re more irritable than usual. 
    
            Over time, an unmistakable throbbing headache sets in, 
making it difficult to concentrate on anything. Eventually, as your body
 protests having the drug taken away, you might even feel dull muscle 
pains, nausea and other flu-like symptoms. 
    
            This isn’t heroin, tobacco or even alcohol withdrawl. We’re 
talking about quitting caffeine, a substance consumed so widely (the FDA
 reports that more than 80 
percent of American adults drink it daily) and in such mundane settings 
(say, at an office meeting or in your car) that we often forget it’s a 
drug—and by far the world’s most popular psychoactive one. 
    
            Like many drugs, caffeine is chemically addictive, a fact that scientists established back in 1994. In May 2013, with the publication of the 5th edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM),
 caffeine withdrawal was finally included as a mental disorder for the 
first time—even though its merits for inclusion are symptoms 
that regular coffee-drinkers have long known well from the times they’ve
 gone off it for a day or more. 
    
            Why, exactly, is caffeine addictive? The reason stems from 
the way the drug affects the human brain, producing the alert feeling 
that caffeine drinkers crave. 
    
            Soon after you drink (or eat)
 something containing caffeine, it’s absorbed through the small 
intestine and dissolved into the bloodstream. Because the chemical is 
both water- and fat-soluble (meaning that it can dissolve in water-based
 solutions—think blood—as well as fat-based substances, such as our cell
 membranes), it’s able to penetrate the blood-brain barrier and enter the brain.
        
    
            Structurally, caffeine closely resembles a molecule that’s naturally present in our brain, called adenosine (which
 is a byproduct of many cellular processes, including cellular 
respiration)—so much so, in fact, that caffeine can fit neatly into our 
brain cells’ receptors for adenosine, effectively blocking them off. 
Normally, the adenosine produced over time locks into these receptors 
and produces a feeling of tiredness.
        
Caffeine
 structurally resembles adenosine enough for it to fit into the brain’s 
adenosine receptors. Image via Wikimedia Commons / Getty Images.
    
            When caffeine molecules are blocking those receptors, they 
prevent this from occurring, thereby generating a sense of alertness and
 energy for a few hours. Additionally, some of the brain’s own natural 
stimulants (such as dopamine)
 work more effectively when the adenosine receptors are blocked, and all
 the surplus adenosine floating around in the brain cues the adrenal 
glands to secrete adrenaline, another stimulant. 
    
            For this reason, caffeine isn’t technically a stimulant on its own, says Stephen R. Braun, the author or Buzzed: the Science and Lore of Caffeine and Alcohol, but a stimulant enabler: a substance that lets our natural stimulants run wild. Ingesting caffeine, he writes,
 is akin to “putting a block of wood under one of the brain’s primary 
brake pedals.” This block stays in place for anywhere from four to six hours, depending on the person’s age, size and other factors, until the caffeine is eventually metabolized by the body. 
    
            In people who take advantage of this process on a daily 
basis (i.e. coffee/tea, soda or energy drink addicts), the brain’s 
chemistry and physical characteristics actually change over time as a 
result. The most notable change is that brain cells grow more adenosine 
receptors, which is the brain’s attempt to maintain equilibrium in the 
face of a constant onslaught of caffeine, with its adenosine receptors 
so regularly plugged (studies indicate that the brain also responds by decreasing the number of receptors for norepinephrine,
 a stimulant). This explains why regular coffee drinkers build up a 
tolerance over time—because you have more adenosine receptors, it takes 
more caffeine to block a significant proportion of them and achieve the 
desired effect. 
    
            This also explains why suddenly giving up caffeine entirely 
can trigger a range of withdrawal effects. The underlying chemistry is 
complex and not fully understood, but the principle is that your brain 
is used to operating in one set of conditions (with an 
artificially-inflated number of adenosine receptors, and a decreased 
number of norepinephrine receptors) that depend upon regular ingestion 
of caffeine. Suddenly, without the drug, the altered brain chemistry 
causes all sorts of problems, including the dreaded caffeine withdrawal 
headache. 
    
            The good news is that, compared to many drug addictions, the
 effects are relatively short-term. To kick the thing, you only need to 
get through about 7-12 days of symptoms without drinking any caffeine. 
During that period, your brain will naturally decrease the number of 
adenosine receptors on each cell, responding to the sudden lack of 
caffeine ingestion. If you can make it that long without a cup of joe or
 a spot of tea, the levels of adenosine receptors in your brain reset to
 their baseline levels, and your addiction will be broken. 
Joseph Stromberg was previously a digital reporter for Smithsonian.

 
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