Earlier this month, researchers discovered that at least part of the euphoria that comes after a strenuous workout — runner's high — is due to endocannabinoids, the body’s self-produced counterparts to some of marijuana’s mood-enhancing chemicals. The finding overturned decades of conventional wisdom claiming that natural highs come from endorphins, the chemicals that became famous in the 1980s for their euphoric effects. While endorphins seem to help numb our muscles during a workout, their molecules are too large to cross the blood-brain barrier and trigger a “high” like endocannabinoids can. Although endocannabinoids may deserve more credit for rewarding your workout, media coverage around the discovery tended to blow the findings a bit out of proportion — giving endocannabinoids all the credit. The study authors' actual claim was that endocannabinoids in addition to endorphins may play a role in runner's high. Endocannabinoids, though, are far from the only intoxicating chemicals our ...
Getting 'High' On Your Own Supply
Explore the science behind runner's high, revealing how endocannabinoids and endorphins interplay for that post-exercise euphoria.
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