drugs and addiction e lecture Flashcards

1
Q

what is the process of neurotransmission

A

-action potential on presynaptic neuron
-causes vesicles to move to axon terminals
-vesicles bind to cell membrane and fuse enabling vesicles to release neurotransmitters into synaptic cleft
-neurotrans. diffuse across cleft and bind to receptors on post synaptic neuron
-this can trigger an action potential in the post synaptic neuron
-once messaged is relayed, post synaptic neuron releases neurotrans. back into synaptic cleft
-some are degraded by enzymes (acetylcholinesterase) and some taken back into presynaptic neuron in reuptake

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2
Q

what is an excitatory response

A

neurotrans makes neuron more likely to fire

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3
Q

what is inhibitory response

A

neurotrans makes neuron less likely to fire

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4
Q

diff drugs for diff neurotrans.

A

-some are very specific and some have a variety of actions
-neurotrans have sub receptors and drugs often work selectively on certain sub receptors

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5
Q

how can antagonists prevent neurotransmission

A

-prevent storage of neurotransmitters in vesicles
-drug can prevent release of neurotransmitters into synaptic cleft
-drug can block post synaptic receptors
-drug can inactivate enzymes to inhibit synthesis of neurotransmitters
-can stimulate reuptake or inhibit release of neurotransmitters

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6
Q

how can agonists increase neurotransmission

A

-drugs serve as a precursor (synthesises neurotransmitter)
e.g tryptophan is precursor to serotonin- precursors are amino acids
-drug can stimulate release of neurotransmitter into synaptic cleft
-drug stimulates post synaptic receptors
-drug block reuptake and blocks autoreceptors
-drug inactivates acetylcholinesterase

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7
Q

what is the nature of addiction

A

-ongoing disagreement

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8
Q

what is drug addiction

A

or substance dependence is a chronically relapsing disorder
-compulsion to seek or take a particular drug
-loss of control in terms of limiting intake
-neg emotional state (dysphoria, anxiety etc) when drug prevented
-no comprehensive globally accepted theory for addiction

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9
Q

features of addiction

A

-tolerance
-withdrawal
-compulsive engagement with drug
-neural mechanisms
-craving/obsessive focus on drug
-relapse
-physical/psychological dependence
(physical dependence leads to physical withdrawal symptoms)
(psychological dependence leads to craving/obsession

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10
Q

physical withdrawal symptoms

A

-due to neuroadaptation
-as drug wears off, uncomfortable physical symptoms occur
e.g heroin = cramps, convulsions, sweating, goose bumps, flu like symptoms
e.g alcohol = (heavy chronic drinkers) tremors, fevour, seizures, hallucinations, fatigue, nausea, vomiting, high BP and HR, headaches etc

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11
Q

how to reverse withdrawal symptoms

A

take the drug, negative reinforcement as prevents these horrible withdrawal symptoms
leads to relapse

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12
Q

half life of drug and withdrawal

A

-shorter the half life, the shorter the withdrawal syndrome
-after physical symptoms subside, dissociation seen between physical and psychological symptoms

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13
Q

what is conditioned withdrawal

A

-pairing of cond stimulus with withdrawal which leads to CR later
-later the CS from the environment can be enough to induce withdrawal
-can lead to relapse, if they feel withdrawal bc of CS cues in environment
-relapse may occur in familiar scenes

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14
Q

what is addiction according to DSM 5

A

-has 11 features
-2/3 criteria = mild substance dependence
-4/5 = moderate substance dependence
6 + = severe substance dep

examples of criteria include:
-taking substance in large amounts for longer than intended
-wanting to cut down/stop but not feeling able to
-cravings and urges to use
-not managing to work, go to school bc of substance
etc etc

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15
Q

ICD criteria for substance dependence (used by UK and others)

A

-must demonstrate presence of 2 or more from guideline of 3

1.impaired control over substance use
2.substance becomes an increasing priority in life
3.physiological features (neuroadaptation, tolerance etc)

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16
Q

what is the addiction cycle

A

volkow

  • preoccupation anticipation - binge intoxication - withdrawal
17
Q

preoccupation/anticipation stage

A

-precedes drug use
-very difficult to measure in humans, does not correlate well with relapse (Tiffany et al 2000)
-pp are unlikely to say they were craving a drug, people tend not to use the word craving when describing a relapse

18
Q

what creates preoccupation/anticipation

A

-priming dose of drug, small dose can increase craving
-drug associated cues = places, objects, stimuli associated with drug
-exposure to stressors

19
Q

binge/intoxication stage

A

-immediate pos reinforcement of drug
-biggest predictor in drug use is already having participating in drug use
-conditioned place preference: pavlovian cond, animals exhibit cond place preference for environment previously associated with drugs
-drugs of abuse decrease threshold for brain stimulation
-reward, correlation between this effect and abuse potential of drug
-associated with neural pathways, biology reinforcement (pos reinforcement also comes from social/cultural practice of drug use)

20
Q

withdrawal neg affect stage

A

-uncomfortable physical/psychological state
-animals avoid environment associated with withdrawal
-reward thresholds increase (reverse tolerance)
-changes to neural pathway contributing to neg emotional state and neg reinforcing properties of drug seeking

21
Q
A