The Opioid Crisis: ALL4KNOX Takeaways

By Dr. H. Lee Martin, President

Trinity Health Foundation of East Tennessee

 

Friday, August 2, the City and County Mayors hosted a gathering to consider how our region can address the issues associated with substance abuse. The venue was the new University Center on the campus of the University of Tennessee, a beautiful facility of which our community can be very proud.

Both mayors, a state agent from the DEA (Drug Enforcement Agency), Brett Pritts, Assistant Special Agent, and several involved citizens and government officials shared their testimonies and their efforts to combat the impact of opioid abuse on our community.   The stories were heart-wrenching, and the support efforts were varied, but the results were limited.

There were two key takeaways for me. Dr. Stephen Loyd, Medical Director of JourneyPure, shared his story and one very informative visual, a PET scan of brains at various stages of addiction recovery. A PET scan visualizes brain activity via a thermal color pattern. Dr. Loyd shared that the brain’s frontal cortex regulates sensible behavior, and the amygdala drives the pleasure center. He showed nine scans: 3 from healthy brains, three from addicted brains after ten days of sobriety, and three from addicted brains after 90 days of sobriety. The activity levels of the frontal cortex (sensible brain) were engaged in the healthy brain and just starting to reinvigorate after 90 days of sobriety for the addicted brains.

The eye-opener was that only the pleasure center was active after ten days of sobriety, and the sensible brain remained inactive! Cravings with no regulation. He was saying that short-term rehabilitation is destined to fail, not because of the lack of discipline of the patient but because of the biology of the brain function. The statistics bear his claims, but I have never seen the brain scans. They provided clear evidence of why opioid recidivism is so common within 30 days of a short sobriety period, no matter how careful caregivers are to protect their loved ones—something to consider if you are trying to help a friend.