Format
Opinion piece, commentary
Publication Date
Published by / Citation
Luengo, J., Estanga, C., & Deluca, G. (2025). The pleasure that doesn't return: Dopaminergic synergy, sexuality and relapse in cocaine addiction. Presented at AASM 2026 Congress, La Plata, Buenos Aires, Argentina.
Original Language

Spanish

Country
Argentina
For
Trainers
Keywords
cocaine
sexuality
relapse
dopamine
dopaminergic synergy
dopaminergic imprint
addiction
sexual compulsion
neuroplasticity
reward system
craving
substance use
cocaine addiction

The Pleasure That Doesn't Return: Dopaminergic Synergy, Sexuality and Relapse in Cocaine Addiction

This work emerges from clinical observation in addiction treatment settings regarding a frequent yet systematically overlooked phenomenon: the convergence of cocaine use and sexual activity as a specific relapse mechanism. It is proposed that, in a subgroup of patients, both stimuli produce a synergistic potentiation of the dopaminergic system of such intensity that the brain would register this experience as a standard of pleasure difficult to achieve through natural biological means. From that point, sexual arousal during sobriety would act as a relapse trigger — not through distress, but through comparison with the dopaminergic imprint built during consumption. The article reviews the neurobiology of the mesolimbic reward system, describes the sex-substance ritualization process, differentiates this mechanism from classical craving, examines institutional clinical silence as a factor perpetuating the cycle, and proposes concrete guidelines for incorporating sexuality as a systematic variable in stimulant addiction treatment protocols. It is grounded in available neuroscientific evidence and concludes with a reflection on neuroplasticity as the foundation of possible recovery.

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