Drug Dependence and Tolerance Flashcards

1
Q

How do we diagnose addiction?

A
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2
Q

Factors Contributing to Vulnerability to Develop Addiction?

A

Also: mental illness-
Emotional disorders key predictor of alcohol use
It is accompanied by more severe symptoms, longer
illness duration, higher relapse

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3
Q

Describe the stages of the addiction cycle

A
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4
Q

What is drug dependence?
9 physical withdrawal effects vs 3 psychological withdrawal effects?

A

An adaptive state, from repeated drug use –> results in withdrawal symptoms upon cessation

Physical withdrawal: characterised by abstinence syndrome (LC) –> Sweating, gooseflesh, irritability, aggression, joint aches, diarrhoea, abdo pain, nausea, insomnia

Psychological: (anxiety, social withdrawal, depression)

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5
Q

4 brain circuits associated with addiction?

A

Orbitofrontal cortex: gives value to reward

Nucleus accumbens + ventral palladius: gives sense of reward

Amygdala & hippocampus = learning and memory: emotional learning of the high

Prefrontal cortex + Anterior cingulate cortex: cognitive control = executive centres, help make judgements, which in addiction are poor

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6
Q

Describe neurobiological Changes during the Addiction Cycle and compare it to a non dependent individual.

In Non-dependent individual: DA neurones ? –> ?.
? rewards release ? here = ?

Drugs ? this pathway –> much more ? released giving ?

So in a dependent individual, the reward pathway is ? –> therefore ?, only drugs are

A

In Non-dependent individual: DA neurones in reward pathway go from ventral tegmental area –> n.accumbens. Natural rewards release DA here = sense of reward

Drugs hijack + overstimulate this pathway –> much more DA released giving a ‘high’ = aka acute positive reinforcement (stage 1)

So in a dependent individual, the reward pathway is suppressed, less DA released –> therefore natural rewards ya no euphoric, only drugs are

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7
Q

How is drug abuse linked to stress pathways?

Which drugs reduce stress and which drugs increase stress?

Either way, drugs of abuse…

A

Hay recruitment of stress pathways: e.g. stimulation of the amygdala by CRF activates the HPA axis.

Opioids inhibit HPA –> reducing stress
Cocaine activates HPA=increased stress

Either way, drugs of abuse send your stress regulatory system haywire –why addictions=lack of coping as they influence HPA dramatically

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8
Q

Give the different acute targets for drugs inc opioids, coke, amphetamines and alcohol

A

Opioids: Agonist at mu (& delta,kappa) opioid receptors
Cocaine: DA transporter blocker - (indirect DA agonist)
Amphetamine: DA releaser - also an indirect DA agonist
Alcohol: Facilitates GABAA + inhibits NMDA receptor function

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9
Q

Give the different acute targets for drugs inc nicotine, cannabinoids, phencyclidine and hallucinogens

A

Nicotine - Agonist at nACh receptors
Cannabinoids - CB1 receptor agonist
Phencyclidine - NMDA receptor antagonist
Hallucinogens - 5-HT2A agonists

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10
Q

MOA of amphetamines + what can happen with prolonged use?
3 Therapeutic uses of amphetamines?

A

Amphetamines (e.g. MD) reverse the DA reuptake transporter + displaces cytosolic DA from vesicles

Prolonged use degenerates amine-containing nerve terminals –> cell death, can lead to amphetamine psychosis = schizophrenia w hallucinations!

Methylphenidate –> treat ADHD
Appetite suppressants in obese
Treat narcolepsy (inability to regulate sleep-wake cycles)

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11
Q

Describe the moa of cocaine
compare 3 methods of Administration?

A

blocks reuptake of DA –> accumulates in synaptic cleft –> increases D1 +D2 receptor stimulation in nucleus accumbens

Inhaled= less intense, but causes nasal mucosa necrosis
Smoked in its free base form (crack)= as intense as IV route

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12
Q

compare pharmacological effects of amphetamine vs cocaine

A

Amphetamine:
euphoria + locomotor stimulation (may increase aggression)
Increased alertness
Excitement
Decreased physical + mental fatigue
Anorexia
Peripheral sympathomimetic actions - increased BP + decreased gastric motility

Cocaine:
Euphoria, locomotor stimulation, heightened pleasure
(lower tendency for the development of delusions, hallucinations and paranoia than amphetamines)

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13
Q

Describe heroin; when is tolerance seen?

A

Opioids produce intense euphoria by acting on MOP e.g Diamorphine (heroin) –> high abuse potential

Tolerance seen within 12-24hrs - therefore heroin is very easy to OD on!

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14
Q

How is opioid addiction treated?

A

methadone (MOP agonist with long half-life) + partial agonists (e.g. buprenorphine)
Both stimulate the receptors giving dampened high (which prevents withdrawal) + also prevents any extra effect from heroin or morphine etc

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15
Q

Describe alcohol’s moa
how can the rewarding effect of alcohol be reduced?

A

Alcohol inhibits presynaptic Ca entry via vgCCs, inhibiting release of GABA.
This disinhibits dopaminergic neurones in mesolimbic pathway –> inducing release of endogenous opioid peptides

The rewarding effect of alcohol is reduced by naltrexone (an opiate antagonist)

NOTE - GABAa is not in Mesolimbic pathway!!

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16
Q

Describe nicotine’s moa

A

Acts at a4β2 ligand gated nACh receptors in different areas of the brain:
In the cortex + Hippocampus (cognition –> alertness)
In the VTA (releases DA into reward pathway –> decreased irritability)

It enhances transmitter release + neuronal excitability –> therefore leads to release of endogenous opioid peptides

17
Q

Describe stage 2 of the addiction cycle

A

Stage 2 – Repetitive Use and Withdrawal
Once someone becomes dependent on a drug, they will experience physical and psychological withdrawal when they are not taking it

18
Q

Describe the mechanism of tolerance to opioids

A

Bombarding opioid receptors every day for long periods= desensitisation (receptor will oppose the normal drug effects)

Desensitisation occurs bc proteins (GRK + beta-arrestin) phosphorylate G protein coupled receptor - inhibting GPC signalling pathway upon binding of opioid
This is reversible alhamdulilah

19
Q

compare types of withdrwals from different drugs:
Psychostimulants, MDMA, Heroin, nicotine, alcohol

A

Psychostimulants: deep sleep, lethargy, depression, anxiety & hunger
MDMA: Depression, anxiety, irritability, aggression
Heroin: Sweating, gooseflesh, irritability, aggression
Nicotine: Irritability, hunger, weight gain, impaired cognitive and motor performance, craving (persisting many years)
Alcohol: Tremor, nausea, fever, hallucinations, sweating

Basically the opp of the drugs effects

20
Q

Describe 3 mechanisms of dependence using imaging.

Less ? activity in ?

Addict brains also had fewer ?–> therefore reduced ?

? connections are ? in addiction, whilst ? connections are ? – these are the changes that drive the addiction

A

Less frontal cortex activity in addicts (so poor decision making)

Addict brains also had fewer D2 (DA) receptors within reward centres–> therefore reduced DA binding, suppressing reward pathways!

Excitatory connections are Strengthened in addiction, whilst inhibitory connections are Downregulated – these are the changes that drive the addiction