CNS depressants Flashcards

1
Q

SEDATIVE-HYPNOTICS

A

General Description
* Drugs which slow/reduce/depress nervous system
activity and behavior
* Collectively, most widely used class of psychoactive drugs
* Arbitrarily classified into four groups

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2
Q

SEDATIVE-HYPNOTICS

A

General Description Cont’d
* Similarities:
– Uses
– Sites of action
– Ability to induce various levels of behavioral
depression

  • Differences
    – Individual potency
    – Chemical structures which affect Absorbed Distributed Metabolized Eliminated
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3
Q

SEDATIVE-HYPNOTICS

A

Sites and Mechanisms of Action
(1) Ascending Reticular Activating System
(2) Diffuse Thalamic Projection System
(3) GABA Receptor Complex System
(4) Cells
- increase and decrease matabolism in cells
(5) Norepinephrine synapses
- decrease activity in synapses

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4
Q

SEDATIVE-HYPNOTICS

A
  • Effects are additive
  • barbs + alc = more effects (combined) –> greater degree of sedation
  • Potentiation can occur
    • can be supra-additive ==> potentiation occurring and ca be unpredictable*** —> one benzo can potentiate effects of alc and vice versa (1 beer = 8 beer)
  • physical state of person can play a role in that
  • morale == DONT MIX
  • Inhibitory synapses are depressed slightly before
    excitatory synapses
  • that pepped up feeling from disinhibition occuring
  • Dependency can develop
  • more sevre is seen in people taking high doses of drug for 6 months (barb, benzo) –> this is for extreme withdrawals seen with these drugs

2 types of with
1. s-hyponotic withd type
- more severe withdrawal
- charactorized by tremors, delerium, hallucinations, cramps, convulsions
- can be fatal
- seen in people taking very high doses for 6 months , can be as short as 1 month
- starts within a few days
- peak and dissipate
- in a couple weeks, withd is over

  1. low dose type
    - seen in benzo taking theraptic dse for longer than 6 months
    - symptoms seen slower , not as severe, go up and down in terms of severity
    - can still experience withd in 30 days
    - no data in when withd stops in l-d ,
    can see symptoms reemergence
    - problems iht sleeping and anxiety can reeemerge wth people (getting withdrawal symptoms, inc HR, sensisty to light, bad attention, –> not feeling like themselves) all of this and THEN reeemergence of problem that they had (problem with sleep and anxiety)
    - few mg of benzo can treat withd symptoms
  • Tolerance can develop
  • 3 tyeps
    1. acute tol –> rapid to benzo and barbs
  • seen in single dose with benzo
    2.chronic tol- more slolwy developing tolerance to benzo anticonvulsant action and drowsiness
  1. cross tolerance –> brbs , benzo, alc
    - barb , stop and take benzo= will be tolerant to benzo
    - or regular consumer of alc –> need more benzo or barb to get effect
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5
Q

ALCOHOL
Absorption

A
  • Alcohol is completely and rapidly absorbed when
    taken orally
  • some absorption in stomach, but majority in
    intestines
  • Rate of absorption modified by a # of factors
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6
Q

ALCOHOL
Distribution

A
  • Alcohol fully and evenly distributed through all body fluids and tissues
  • BBB is 90% permeable to alcohol (not very perm to alc)
  • Dissolves more readily in water than in fat, thus:
  • higher Blood alcohol levels in women than men –> women have more body fat than men do = less body water (higher concentration of alcohol)

higher BA levels in older men than younger men (more fat in older men)

  • Readily crosses placental barrier
  • why women are advised not to consume alcohol during pregnancy
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7
Q

Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders

A
  • Prenatal exposure to alcohol is associated with a
    range of congenital physical and behavioral
    abnormalities categorized under the umbrella
    term of Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders
  • Distinction between conditions is the number
    and/or severity of the symptoms
  • fetal alc syndrome vs fetal alcohol effects –> differ from physical and behvaioural symptoms you see
  • partial FAS
  • static encephalopathy
  • alcohol related birth defects
  • Symptoms include:
    – Facial abnormalities
  • small eye opening
  • short indentation in upper lip (smooth philtrm)
  • short flat broad nose
  • abnoraml creases in palm of hands
  • webbingin hands

consistently seen across different species

7 drinks per week can cause FADS

3rd leading cause of birthdefects at birth
- only preventable one

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8
Q

Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders

A
  • Symptoms include:
    – Facial abnormalities
    – Heart defects
    – Low intellectual functioning
    – Growth retardation
    – Learning disabilities
  • CDN Prevalence Estimates
    – 9 /1000 births FASD
    – 1-3/1000 births FAS
  • 4%in canada
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9
Q

FASD Cont’d

A
  • Risk and extent of abnormalities believed to be dose- related (higehr alc consumption = higher likelihood of symptoms)
  • Type of abnormality believed to be related to timing of alcohol use
  • thin upper lips (1-3 drinks/day in 2nd half of 1st trimester
  • small head (first trimester ingestion)
    -first trimester –> abnormal brian dev and abnormal brain development
    later in pregnancy –> (after 1st trim) fetal malnutrition (less food and less vitamin d )—> associated to growth retardation
    – Feldman et at (2012)
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10
Q

ALCOHOL
Metabolization & Elimination

A
  • 90-98% of alcohol ingested is metabolized is stomach (15-20%) and liver (80-85%) before excreted
  • Excretion can occur thru breath, sweat, tears, urine,
    and feces
  • some nonmetabolized through skin and breath
  • Metabolization in liver occurs in two steps:
  • 1st step (rate limiting step): slow step, determined by amount of alcohol dehydrogenase
  • 2nd step ():

paper: ethanol + alco dehy –> acetaldehyde + (aldehyde dehydrogenase) –> acetyl coenzyme A + (citric acid cycle) –> energy, carbon dioxide, water
–> shows that alc has no nutritional value**

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11
Q

ALCOHOL
Metabolization & Elimination

A
  • Rate of metabolization is linear with time (10-20mg/100 ml of blood per hour)
    – 1 to 1.5 hours for
    —–30 ml of whiskey (40%)
    ——120 ml of wine (11%)
    —–360 ml of beer (5%)
  • Considerable variability between individuals in
    elimination rates***
  • Non-drinkers metabolize alcohol (12-14 mg/100ml blood) at slightly lower rates than light to moderate drinkers (15-17mg/100ml)
  • 1 drink per hour –> will be metabolized so you wont be intoxicated (typically but there is variability)

alcohol dehydrogenase system
- acetyladehye will build up in system when you drink more (causes nausea) cuz it is toxic
- a treatment for alc abuse (Antabuse (trade name), disuflerame (generic name)) –> interfers with action of aldehyde dehydrogenase –> gets them sick from causing a build up of acetylaldehyde

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12
Q

Metabolization & Elimination

A

2nd system :
Microsomal Ethanol Oxidizing System (MEOS)
- metabolized to acetlyaldehyde –> metabolizses the alcohol
– Handles approximately 5 to 10% of alcohol metabolization, but activity will increase with higher Blood Alcohol Levels –> consuming a lot of alcohol, this system ups its action substantially

  • Operation of this system believed to be responsible for tolerance seen with heavy drinking**–> along with alc dehydrogenase (metab 85%), MEOS increase with more alcohol –> goal = to increase more alcohol
  • 30-50% increase in drinking with action of this system
  • Operation of this system (MEOS) believed to be
    responsible for cross tolerance to barbiturates
    and benzodiazepines****
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13
Q

ALCOHOL
Mechanisms of Action

A

A lot of pharm actions**
Facilitates action at the GABAa receptor chloride
ionphore complex system
– Binds to an allosteric (causes change) site (located within cloride ion channel)
– This affects GABA binding at GABA receptor; opens up Cl- ion channel

  • At high levels, alcohol can directly open up Cl- channel**

by facilitating GABA distributed very widely across NS (causes inhibition*****)—> Antagonist of glutamate at NMDA receptors blockign NMDA from getting to receptors== causes IPSPs

  • depresses activity of thalamus (lowers peripheral vision), Brain stem (sedating effect) , cerebellum (loss of coordination),
  • Impacts production and release of endorphins and
    dynorphins; increases release of Dopamine in nucleus accumbens ==> responsible for euphoria from alcohol , and cravings for alcohol
  • Increase activity in mesolimbic dopamine
    system/levels of DA in nucleus accumbens thru release
    of inhibition
  • shows complexity of drugs effects:
    frst 2 = pre-alcohol
    –> GABAergic neurons (ALPHA) coming from NA activate GABAergic interneurons
    –> GABAergic interneurons (BETA) inhibit DA neurons in VTA: this is the normal state

INTRODUCE ALCOHOL

GABAergic neurons coming from NA (the alphas) increase release of GABA onto the inhibitory GABAergic interneurons (BETAs) - which decrease the BETAs activity (cl- channels open up = IPSP)

DEcreased BETA activity = less inhibition of DA neurons ==> more DA released in NA

  • receptor site determines effects*****
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14
Q

ALCOHOL
Physiological Effects

A
  • Sleep disturbances
    – Induces Slow Wave Sleep (reduces amount of time it takes to fall asleep) and prolongs SWS and depressed REM sleep
  • Affect on REM varies with dose** (low alc levels –> REM reduced at first sleep cycle but then return to normal levles, high alc levels –> REM depressed throught entire sleep cycle (asleep, wake with no dreams)

ex: a lot to drink sat, sun, mon (REM cycles will return to normal after 3 days (tolerance will develop to this effect**)
- then stop drinking –> REM rebound –> see greater periods in REM sleep (restless sleep, nightmares) –> induces drug cycle
- effect on REM and sleep can last for months
(withdrawal symptom)

  • Depressed Respiration (in high doses of alc)
  • effect on medulla (can drink themselves to death)
  • tolerance never develops to this effect
  • Prevents Seizures
  • Vasodilation
  • leads to flushed faces

also, decrease sensitivity to taste and smell

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15
Q

ALCOHOL
Physiological Effects

A
  • Diuretic Effect on Kidney –> increase secretion of water (pee) –> decrease output of ADH suppressant
    –> seen when BAL start to remain steady or start to fall
  • Immunosuppression
    –> not good to drink on a cold
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16
Q

ALCOHOL
Psychological Effects

A
  • Relief from anxiety
  • Disinhibition
  • Euphoria
  • 3 above are unpredictable –> determined by a persons personality, characteristics, expectations of alcohol consumption scenario, setting of alcohol
  • Disrupted Memory Functioning
    both encoding, storing and retrieval of information
  • due to reduced neurological alertness in Brainstem
  • GABA receptors in hippo will disrupt Hippo functioning –> disrupt LT potentiation (which is how we form a memory)
  • interferes in creating new neurons in hippocampus
  • dysfunction of PreFC plays a large role in focusing attention (encoding of info) –> cant get a memory of something we didn’t pay attention to it)

-summary, hippo, LTP, PFC, attention, formation disrupted ====> blackout (unable to determine events that happened)
- can have fragmentory blakcouts (remeber bits and pieces)

17
Q

ALCOHOL
Effects and BAL

A

BAL Effect
.01-.02 (1 drink in hour)—> Slight changes in feeling (well being, less anxiety)

.03-.05 (2 drink in hour)–> Overt feelings of relaxation, happiness, skin may flush, tingling

.05-.06 (2.5 drink/hour)–> More noticeable changes in emotion, slight increase in RT (slower), tingling more noticeable

.08-.09 (3 drink/hour)–> Moderate increase in RT, possible numbness in cheeks, lips, extremities, impaired judgment (PFC gets affected)
- cortex affected first in drunkness***
- frontal, parietal, temporal, down BS

.10 (4 drinks/hour)–> Coordination/balance impaired (cerebellum affectde)

18
Q

ALCOHOL
Effects and BAL
BAL Effect

A

.20 (7 drinks/hour) Difficulty staying awake, standing,
walking without assistance; sensory functions impaired

.30 (10 drinks/hour) Confusion and stupor, not sure where or who they are, how they got there

.40 (14 drinks/hour) Typically unconscious, threshold of coma

.45-.60 (20-25 drinks/hour) Typically deep coma, LD50 in humans*** due to circulatory and respiratory depression

19
Q

sed/hyps (4)

A

barbs
non barb hyps
benzo
misc compounds (alcohol)

similarily: uses (treats anxiety)
- alcohol can treat anxiety (all of this category treats this)
- induce a lot of behvaioural depression
- similar Sof A
-

differences:

20
Q

ALCOHOL
Toxic Effects with Chronic Use

A

Liver Disease
1. Fatty Liver –> liver breask down alcohol in favour of fat –> build up of fatty tissue in liver , accumulation of fatty tissue compromises liver function (is reversible***) if not drinking:

  1. Alcoholic Hepatitis–> inflammation and scarring of liver tissue–> caused by build up fatty tissue (liver cells will breakdown (dead tissue debris) , see jaundice, fever, abdominal pain (reversible**_ liver functioning will mostly turn to normal with some scarring) if they continue:
  2. Alcoholic Cirrhosis: progression of scar tissue, chokes off BV in liver–> BV burst and death (not reversible )
    - only treatment is a liver transplant
    - wont automatically die from this but death rate si 75%
    - most deaths in men40-60yo
    - minimum amount is 5 drinks/day for 5 years straight
    - takes a fair bt of drinking for AC to happen

Cardiovascular Problems
– Inflammation of Heart Muscle –> poor ciruculation to heart

– Irregular Heart Contractions
– Fatty accumulation in heart and arteries
– High Blood Pressure

21
Q

ALCOHOL
Toxic Effects with Chronic Use

A

Cancer
– Esophagus, Pharynx, Larynx, Breast

Wernicke-Korsakoff Syndrome
- 2nd stage = korsakoff psychosis
– Permanent diffuse damage to hippocampus and
cerebral cortex
– Memory problems –> anterior brain amnesia (inability to from memories) similar to dementia
- memories back to childhood
- make things up* –> not truthful answer
– Primarily due to malnutrition, but other factors
may play a role
- vitamin B deficiency* –> needed by neurons for metab of glucose

–> there ca be improvemetns with a vitamin replacement therapy –> if too much, vitamin replacement doesnt work

  • Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders
22
Q

increasing doses of the drug

A

normal –> relief from anx –> disinhibtion–> sedation –> hypnosis (sleep) –> general anesthesia (ultra short acting barbs will dothis) –> coma –> death

23
Q

Tolerance

A
  • Can develop with heavy use re: effects of mood
    and behavior (maximum tolerance developing in 3 weeks with heavvy use) –> increase dose by 50% for fx to be realized
  • Minimal tolerance re: depressant actions of respiration

Mechanisms responsible for tolerance:
– Increased # of Cytochrome P450 enzymes
– Increased activity of alcohol dehydrogenase in liver and stomach (a lot of alc metabolized in both b4 getting to BS

– Increased activity of MEOS

– Down regulation of GABA receptors –> fewer GABA receptors availbale for GABAa to bind to

– Upregulation of NMDA receptors (from NMDA being blocked from alcohol) –> body responds by creating more receptros

Acute tolerance to alcohol: fx more pronounced when BAL are rising vs falling

– Behavioral compensation –> move slowly to compensate for loss of coordination

24
Q

ALCOHOL
Dependence

A

to get physio dep: need t consume large amount for months to see withdrawal symptoms

psychological dep: primary (+ effects)

Psychological and physiological dependency can
develop

  • Withdrawal can be life-threatening –> can get heart failure –> leads to death ,,,, can experience dysphoria = depression= suicide for some people
  • Withdrawal symptoms begin in 6-48 hours after stopped consumption
  • Two clusters of symptoms
25
Q

ALCOHOL
Alcohol Withdrawal Syndrome cluster 1

A

More common cluster (low dose withdrawal)

  • Characterized by:
    – Insomnia, vivid dreaming (Increased REM sleep)

– Tremors, sweating, agitation, nausea, vomiting, increased hr and bp

  • Peak in 24-36 hours, typically over in 48

5% of people who get hospitalized for alc withd
- symptoms can become more intense (delerium tremens)

26
Q

ALCOHOL
Delirium Tremens

A
  • less common cluster
  • More dangerous
  • Characterized by:
    – Extreme disorientation
    – Fever, profuse sweating
    – Periods of hallucinations
  • Fever, sweating can lead to heart failure and
    dehydration
  • Suicide sometimes seen
27
Q

GABA - a receptor –> for GABA receptor chloride ionophore complex

A

neurosteriods and barbs in B
- barbs higher OD cuz they can open these receptors by themselves (without GABA)
- whereas benzo bind to receptro making it more likely that GABA can open the receptor

EXAM QUESTION ON PHOTO***

benzo in between A and y

ethanol in A receptor

28
Q

alc and crime
correctional servcies of can

A

computerized assessment of substance Abuse

42% of attributable crimes involved alcohol and other substances (woudlnt have commited crime unless under influence of alc or another drug)

alcohol associated with more violent (20%) then non-violent crime (7%) relative to other drugs (cocaine, cannabis, opiates)

29
Q

Canadian centre on substance abuse (2002) study:

A

1 crime when under use of alc = drunk driving

nationally –> 24% of offenders drunk when doing crime
assault offenders –> 39%
homocides –> 34%
attempted murder –> 30%
theft–> 16%
breaking and entering – >22%

30
Q

alcohol history in TB ***

A
31
Q

alcohol ABsoprtion

A

Alcohol is completely and rapidly absorbed when
taken orally

  • some absorption in stomach (20%), but majority in small intestines (80%)
  • Rate of absorption modified by a # of factors
    factors like oral absorption
  • volume of fluid that alc is suspended in (higher % alc) –> quicker it will be absorbed
  • stomach emptying time
  • food in stomach