Research News

Exercise can help beat cocaine addiction, study finds

Back View Of Group Of Men Using Running Machines In Gym.

RIA researcher Panayotis "Peter" Thanos found that regular aerobic exercise — one hour on a treadmill, five times a week — decreased stress-induced, cocaine-seeking behavior.

By CATHY WILDE

Published August 13, 2018 This content is archived.

Print
headshot of Panayotis “Peter” Thanos.
“Our results suggest that regular aerobic exercise could be a useful strategy for relapse prevention as part of a comprehensive treatment program for recovering cocaine abusers. ”
Panayotis “Peter” Thanos, senior research scientist
Research Institute on Addictions

Exercise can help prevent relapses into cocaine addiction, according to new research led by UB scientist Panayotis “Peter” Thanos.

“Cocaine addiction is often characterized by cycles of recovery and relapse, with stress and negative emotions, often caused by withdrawal itself, among the major causes of relapse,” says Thanos, senior research scientist the Research Institute on Addictions and the Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology in the Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences.

Using animal models, Thanos found that regular aerobic exercise — one hour on a treadmill, five times a week — decreased stress-induced, cocaine-seeking behavior. Exercise also altered behavioral and physiological responses to stress.

Individuals who are addicted to cocaine have altered neural, behavioral and physiological responses to stress. Recent research by Thanos demonstrated how exercise can alter the brain’s mesolimbic dopamine pathway, which is linked to the rewarding and reinforcing properties of drugs such as cocaine.

In addition, exercise has been shown to reduce stress hormones and elevate mood, which could assist in alleviating anxiety and negative emotions associated with withdrawal.

Studies already have shown that aerobic exercise — also known as “cardio” — is an effective strategy against many physical health problems, including heart disease, diabetes and arthritis, along with certain mental health issues, such as stress, anxiety and depression.

“Our results suggest that regular aerobic exercise could be a useful strategy for relapse prevention as part of a comprehensive treatment program for recovering cocaine abusers,” Thanos says. “Further research is necessary to see if these results also hold true for other addictive drugs.”

The study was funded by the N.Y. Research Foundation and appears in the online edition of Behavioural Brain Research. The article authors include Lisa S. Robison, a former graduate student of Thanos who is now with the Department of Neuroscience and Experimental Therapeutics at Albany Medical College, and Luke Alessi of the New York Institute of Technology College of Osteopathic Medicine, as well as Thanos.