The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

What makes something addictive?

- By Lindsey Tanner The Associated Press

CHICAGO » Now that the world’s leading public health group says too much Minecraft can be an addiction, could overindulg­ing in chocolate, exercise, even sex, be next?

The short answer is probably not.

The new “gaming disorder” classifica­tion from the World Health Organizati­on revives a debate in the medical community about whether behaviors can cause the same kind of addictive illness as drugs.

The strictest definition of addiction refers to a disease resulting from changes in brain chemistry caused by compulsive use of drugs or alcohol. The definition includes excessive use that damages health, relationsh­ips, jobs and other parts of normal life. Brain research supports that definition, and some imaging studies have suggested that excessive gaming might affect the brain in similar ways.

Under a looser definition, addiction is considered “a disease of extreme behavior. Any behavior carried to extreme that consumes you and keeps you from doing what you should be doing becomes an addiction as far as life is concerned,” said Dr. Walter Ling, a UCLA psychiatri­st.

In its widely used manual for diagnosing mental illness, the American Psychiatri­c Associatio­n calls excessive video gaming a “condition” but not a formal diagnosis or disease, and says more research is needed to determine if it qualifies as an addiction.

Drugs and the brain

Certain drugs including opioids and alcohol can over-activate the brain’s reward circuit. That’s the system that under normal circumstan­ces is activated when people engage in “behaviors conducive to survival” including eating and drinking water when thirsty, explained Dr. Andrew Saxon, chairman of the associatio­n’s addiction psychiatry council. The brain chemical dopamine regulates these behaviors, but narcotic drugs can flood the brain with dopamine, encouragin­g repeated use and making drug use more rewarding that healthy behaviors, Saxon said. Eventually increasing amounts are needed to get the same effect, and brain changes lead to an inability to control use.

What about other substances?

Caffeine is a stimulant and also activates the brain’s reward system, but to a much lesser degree than addictive drugs. The “reward” can make people feel more alert, and frequent users can develop mild withdrawal symptoms when they stop, including headaches and tiredness. Caffeine-containing chocolate may produce similar effects. Neither substance causes the kinds of life problems found in drug addiction, although some coffee drinkers develop a tolerance to caffeine and need to drink more to get the same “buzz” or sense of alertness.

The World Health Organizati­on recognizes caffeine “dependence” as a disorder; the American Psychiatri­c Associatio­n does not and says more research is needed.

“The term ‘addiction’ is tossed around pretty commonly, like ‘chocoholic’ or saying you’re addicted to reality TV,” said Dr. Ellen Selkie, a University of Michigan physician who studies teens’ use of digital technology. But addiction means an inability to control use “to the point where you’re failing at life,” she said.

What about behavior?

The only behavior classified as an addiction in the American Psychiatri­c Associatio­n’s diagnostic manual is compulsive gambling. To be diagnosed, gamblers must have several symptoms including repeatedly gambling increasing amounts of money, lying to hide gambling activity, feeling irritable or restless when trying to stop, and losing jobs or relationsh­ips because of gambling. Research suggests excessive gambling can affect the brain in ways similar to addictive drugs. Since the diagnostic manual was last updated, in 2013, studies have bolstered evidence that excessive video gaming may do the same thing, and some experts speculate that it may be added to the next update.

The manual doesn’t include sex addiction because there’s little evidence that compulsive sexual behavior has similar effects on the brain.

Many excessive gamblers, gamers and sex “addicts” have other psychiatri­c conditions, including anxiety, attention deficit disorder and depression, and some mental health specialist­s believe their compulsive behaviors are merely symptoms of those diseases rather than separate addictions.

Excessive use of the internet and smartphone­s is also absent from the psychiatri­c manual and World Health Organizati­on’s update. Psychiatri­sts disagree on whether that is a true addiction — partly because overuse is hard to measure when so many people need to use their smartphone­s and the internet for their jobs.

Does the term matter?

The World Health Organizati­on’s decision to classify excessive video gaming as an addiction means “gaming disorder” will be added to this year’s update to the organizati­on’s Internatio­nal Classifica­tion of Diseases. Doctors worldwide use that document to diagnose physical and mental illnesses. Insurers, including Medicaid and Medicare, use billing codes listed there to make coverage decisions. The American Psychiatri­c Associatio­n’s manual is widely used for defining and diagnosing mental disorders. If conditions aren’t listed in these documents, insurance coverage for treatment is unlikely.

 ?? AHN YOUNG-JOON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A college student plays a computer game at an Internet cafe in Seoul, South Korea.
AHN YOUNG-JOON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A college student plays a computer game at an Internet cafe in Seoul, South Korea.
 ?? KAMIL ZIHNIOGLU — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? A man plays a game at the Paris Games Week in Paris. The World Health Organizati­on says that compulsive­ly playing video games now qualifies as a new mental health condition.
KAMIL ZIHNIOGLU — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE A man plays a game at the Paris Games Week in Paris. The World Health Organizati­on says that compulsive­ly playing video games now qualifies as a new mental health condition.

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