Addiction Counseling Southfield MI

This page provides relevant content and local businesses that can help with your search for information on Addiction Counseling. You will find informative articles about Addiction Counseling, including "Is Addiction Hereditary?". Below you will also find local businesses that may provide the products or services you are looking for. Please scroll down to find the local resources in Southfield, MI that can help answer your questions about Addiction Counseling.

Mrs. Gayle Walls-Brown
Independent Private Practitioner

313-610-5711
20700 Civic Center Dr.Ste: 170
Southfield, MI
Ms. Marge Redmond
Northwest Counseling

248-354-5760
28336 Franklin Rd.
Southfield, MI
Mrs. Rhonna Nelson
Rhonna Nelson, LMSW, DCSW, CAADC, PC

248-723-4114
31000 Telegraph Road, Suite 150
Bingham Farms, MI
Ms. Lynn Keidan
Northwest Counseling &Psychotherapy Center

248-330-1768
30375 Northwestern Highway-Suite 200
Farmington Hills, MI
Mr. Aric Cohen
Aric B. Cohen,LMSW,CSW,PLC

248-224-0982
30375 Northwestern Hwy. Suite 200
Farmington Hills, MI
Mrs. Denise Johnson
Vital Options LLC

248-358-6926
26677 W. 12 Mile
Southfield, MI
Ms. Julie Hamilton
Julie Hamilton, LMSW, ACSW, CAAC, P.C.

248-549-4197
31000 Telegraph Rd. Suite 130
Bingham Farms, MI
Ms. Maggie McMullen-Faff
Positive Perceptions Integrative Center

248-563-9791
23023 Orchard Lake Road, Bldg C
Farmington, MI
Mrs. Barbara Nickel
Barbara Nickel, LMSW, ACSW, PLLC

248-892-7401
27620 Farmington Road Suite 208
Farmington Hills, MI
Mr. Elliot Rosen
Eastwood Clinics

734-425-4070
17250 Farmington Rd
Livonia, MI
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Is Addiction Hereditary?

Generally, society harshly judges people who suffer from drug and alcohol addiction. We tend to assume these individuals have a character flaw or personality weakness. Addiction, however, is a very real and complex disease, just as heart disease is. Scientists now know that family history is a strong predictor of who is most at risk for becoming addicted.

According to the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), addiction is a chronic, relapsing brain disease characterized by compulsive drug (or alcohol) seeking and use, despite harmful consequences. Addiction disrupts normal, healthy functioning of the brain. This disease process is the same regardless of the type of substance a person abuses. Like many other diseases, addictions are preventable and treatable, but left untreated, their damaging effects can last a lifetime.

Genetics account for 40 to 60 percent of a person's vulnerability to addiction. Biology (for example, age, and presence of other diseases) and environmental influences (stress, diet, and peer pressure) also play a significant role. Not surprisingly, adolescents and those with mental health disorders are at greatest risk for substance abuse and addiction.

Drugs and alcohol initially activate pleasure pathways in the brain. With prolonged use, these substances blunt the pathways and no longer produce a pleasurable high. This essentially sets a new normal level of brain functioning, which requires more and more drugs or alcohol just to maintain.

The likelihood that someone who tries drugs or alcohol will become addicted varies. The Institute of Medicine of the National Academy of Sciences reports that 32 percent of those who try tobacco will become dependent. Twenty three percent who try heroin, 17 percent who try cocaine, 15 percent who try alcohol, and nine percent who try marijuana will also become dependent.

While research has established that alcoholism runs in families, scientists have now identified the genetic variations that contribute to the hereditary nature of the disease. Genetic variation describes the differences of sequencing of DNA among individuals that influences whether a person has higher or lower risk for developing a particular disease, such as addiction. In some cases, genetic variation can actually protect a person from the effects of a drug.

Although family history of alcohol abuse predicts who is most likely to develop an addiction, it does not predict who will successfully recover from addiction. Other factors, such as poor impulse control and mild cognitive dysfunction, are actually more important in predicting remission. Interestingly, scientists have found that those who get the sickest from alcohol are also the ones most likely to get better.

Understanding the role of heredity on addiction helps physicians develop new ways to prevent and treat this disease.

Sources

Boughton, Barbara. "APA 2009: Family History Linked to Alcoholism but Does Not Predict Remission."  

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