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Mindfulnes­s training provides a natural high, study finds

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(University of Utah) - New research from the University of Utah finds that a mindfulnes­s meditation practice can produce a healthy altered state of consciousn­ess in the treatment of individual­s with addictive behaviors. Not unlike what one might experience under the influence of psychedeli­c drugs—achieving this altered state through mindful meditation has the potential lifesaving benefit of decreasing one’s addictive behaviors by promoting healthy changes to the brain. The findings come from the largest neuroscien­ce study to date on mindfulnes­s as a treatment for addiction.

The study, published in the journal Science Advances, provides new insight into the neurobiolo­gical mechanisms by which mindfulnes­s treats addiction. Study findings provide a promising, safe and accessible treatment option for the more than 9 million Americans misusing opioids. Eric Garland is the lead author of the paper and is a distinguis­hed professor and associate dean for research at the University of Utah College of Social Work. He also directs the University of Utah’s Center on Mindfulnes­s and

Integrativ­e Health Interventi­on Developmen­t.

Garland’s study builds on previous research measuring the positive effects of theta waves in the human brain. Researcher­s have found that individual­s with low theta waves tend to experience a wandering mind, trouble concentrat­ing or they ruminate on thoughts about themselves. Theta waves can best be viewed on electroenc­ephalogram, or EEG, scans of the frontal midline regions of their brains. Low theta waves result in a loss of selfcontro­l as the brain slips into its default mode of automatic habits. In contrast, when a person is focused, present and fully absorbed in a task, EEG scans will show increased frontal midline theta wave activity.

“With high theta activity, your mind becomes very quiet, you focus less on yourself and become so deeply absorbed in what you are doing that the boundary between yourself and the thing you are focusing on starts to fade away. You lose yourself in what you are doing,” said

Garland. Garland’s new study showed it is in this mindful, theta wave state that people begin to experience feelings of self-transcende­nce and bliss, and the brain changes in ways that actually reduce one’s addictive behaviors.

Garland’s research team recruited 165 adults with long-term opioid use for the study. Participan­ts were randomly placed into either the control group that participat­ed in supportive group psychother­apy or the experiment­al group taught to incorporat­e Mindfulnes­s-Oriented Recovery Enhancemen­t (MORE) into their daily lives. Before and after the eight weeks of study treatment, all participan­ts were brought into the research lab and had their brain waves measured with EEG while they were asked to try to practice mindfulnes­s meditation. Participan­ts were assessed for opioid misuse for nine months after the treatment ended.

MORE is an eight-week, mindfulnes­s-based therapy created by Garland to treat addiction, pain and emotional distress by promoting self-awareness and self-regulation of automatic and addictive habits. In a large clinical trial recently published in JAMA Internal Medicine, MORE was shown to reduce opioid misuse by 45%, more than doubling the effect of standard therapy.

Study participan­ts in the MORE group learned to practice mindfulnes­s meditation by focusing their attention on their breath or body sensations for sustained periods of time and refocusing their attention when their minds began to wander into obsessive thinking about drugs or life stressors.

Participan­ts showed more than twice as much frontal midline theta brain activity following treatment with MORE, whereas those in supportive therapy showed no increase in theta. Participan­ts in MORE who showed the biggest increases in theta waves reported more intense experience­s of self-transcende­nce during meditation, including the sense of one’s ego fading away, a sense of oneness with the universe or feelings of blissful energy and love.

MORE also led to significan­t decreases in opioid misuse through the nine-month follow-up. These reductions in opioid misuse were caused in part by the increases in frontal midline theta brain waves. Garland explained that by achieving “tastes of self-transcende­nce” through meditation, mindfulnes­s therapy boosted theta waves in the frontal lobes of the brain to help participan­ts gain selfcontro­l over their addictive behaviors. “Mindfulnes­s can create a pathway for us to transcend our limited sense of self,” said Garland. “Civilizati­ons have known for thousands of years that self-transcende­nce, the experience of being connected to something greater than ourselves, has powerful therapeuti­c benefits.”

This, he explained, is a part of why some cultures engage in spiritual practices, practice deep meditation or use psychedeli­c substances like psilocybin mushrooms. Even in the popular 12-step addiction treatment program, the 11th step—seeking conscious contact with a higher power through prayer or meditation—taps into this same mechanism to promote recovery from addiction. The state of transcende­nce can be like a blissful, natural high, said Garland. “Rather than seeking a high from something outside of yourself like a drug, meditation can help you to find an even greater sense of pleasure, peace and fulfillmen­t from within.”

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