Chapter Ten - Psychomotor Stimulants Flashcards

1
Q

Define:

Psychostimulants

A
  • Common drugs of abuse, but many have legitimate therapeutic purposes.
  • ie. cocaine, amphetamine.
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2
Q

Provide Examples of 5 Common Psychostimulants:

A
  1. Ampthetamine.
  2. Cocaine.
  3. Methylphenidate.
  4. Cathinone.
  5. Ephedrine.
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3
Q

Khat and the Cathinones:

A
  • Cathinones come from chewing leaves of tht knat plant.
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4
Q

Cocaine:

A
  • Comes from the coca bush in South America.
  • Smoked, snorted, or injected.
  • Never a slow drug.
  • Has a much shorter half-life.
  • Often taken in conjuction with other drugs.
  • Quicket onset of withdrawal.
  • Abuser’s can experience ‘coke-out’.
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5
Q

Phases of Cocaine Overdose?

A
  1. Initial excitement followed by severe headache, nausea, vomiting, and convulsions.
  2. Loss of consciousness, respiratory depression, and cardiac failure causing death.
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6
Q

Ephedrine & Amphetamine:

A
  • Ma Huang has been used in traditional Chinese medicine for 5000 years, it is a natural soruce of ephedrine.
  • Effective in treating asthma.
  • Amphetamine is a cheaper substitute, and is used to treat Parkinson’s, sea sickness. It is a well known drug and addiction comes easily.
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7
Q

Psychostimulant Administration:

A
  • Taken many ways, which effects distribution and elimination.
  • Readily absorbed and quickly distributed.
  • They are smaller, so they can pass through barriers in the body quicker.
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8
Q

Cathinone Absorption:

A
  • Generally taken orally, absorbed in digestive system, & do not cross into the brain as well as others.
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9
Q

Methamphetamines Absorption:

A
  • Highest abuse liability with higher lipophilicity, quicker passage of the BBB, and greater stability against enzyme degradation.
  • They like fatty tissues, hense faster way through BBB, and they are robust, meaning they can resist enzymes.
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10
Q

Biggest Difference Between Meth & Cocaine?

A
  • How it survives in the body.
  • Meth will survive better and longer owing to its built in mechanism to avoid enzymes.
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11
Q

What Enzymes Convert Methamphetamine into Amphetamine?

A
  • Liver Enzymes.
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12
Q

Psychostimulant Biotransformation Process?

A
  • Occurs in the liver.
  • Conversion into metabolites in order to be able to cross BBB.
  • Drug combination may also interact to produce active metabolites.
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13
Q

Psychostimulant Elimination:

A
  • Amphetamine is metabolizes at low PH levels, so it does not want to leave, so you need to take bases to excrete it.
  • Methamphetamine and cathinones are primarly broken down in liver.
  • Cocaine has a short half-life [1 hour half-life].
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14
Q

Monoamines?

A
  • a compound having a single amine group in its molecule, especially one that is a neurotransmitter.
  • Tyrosine hydrozylase is the most important one [capable to produce dopamine (chart shows L-Dopa)].
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15
Q

Dopamine Receptors:

A
  • Three inhbitory [D2-D4].
  • 2 excitatory [D1 & D5].
  • Are all metabotrophic.
  • If a synapse was a grovrey store, these receptors are like the one cashier and there are a billion customers and the cashier is doing everything because there aren’t enough staff.
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16
Q

Mesolimbic Dopaminergic ‘Reward’ Circuitry?

A
  • Dopamine is associated with reward, motivation, & conditioning.
  • Nucleus accumbens, medial forebrain bundle, substantia nigra, and ventral termental area [VTA].
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17
Q

Norepinephrine Receptors:

A
  • Four excitatory.
  • One inhibitory, being A2.
  • All metabotropic.
18
Q

Noradrenergic System:

A
  • Norepinephrine has been associated with several brain functions, such as sleep, memory, learning, & emotions.
  • The pathway of this system touches upon every other system in the brain [?].
19
Q

Serotonin Receptors:

A
  • 2 inhibitory [5-HT1 & 5-HT5].
  • 5 excitatory [2,3,4,6,7]
  • Only 5-HT3 is ionotrophic, the rest are metabotrophic.
  • 5-HT2 is seen a lot, most prominent
20
Q

Normal Transmission?

[Monoamines]

A
  • Monoamines are released into the synaptic cleft and activates post synaptic receptors.
  • Following the release and receptor-activation, neurotransmission is terminatied by the activity or specific enzymes in the cleft, and the reabsorption of neurotransmitter molesules into the presynaptic neuron.
21
Q

MOA of Cathinones:

A
  • Cathinones have strong binding affinity for NETS and DATS.
  • They do not touch sertoninergic signaling.
  • Causes release of epinephrine, leading to fight or flight response.
22
Q

MOA of Amphetamines:

A
  • Promiscuous in action and compete with molecules of monoamine for transport into the axon terminal via DATs, NETs, and SERTs.
  • Capable of displacing monoamines from presynaptic neuron.
  • Not just one mechanism, they have several.
23
Q

Define:

Unconditioned Behaviours

A
  • Primates: behaviours vary grewatly between individuals, bu at high doses, automutlation is seen.
  • Humans: formication may be seen.
24
Q

Define:

Physiological Effects

A
  • Falls under objective effects.
  • Things such as heart rate, blood pressure, body temp. increase, pupil dialation, vasodilation, etc.
25
Q

Harmful Effects of Psychostimulants?

A
  • Cocaine: Liver damage. Injury to mucus membranes.
  • Psychomotor stimulants: Blurred vision, paranoia, hallucinations, weightloss, attention issues.
  • ADHD meds: lower growth due to suppressed appetite.
26
Q

Define:

The Neurotoxic Effect

A
  • Abuse of amphetamines affects DA and 5-HT producing cells.
  • Methamphetamine exposure can have long-term damage to DA and 5-HT cells within the hippocampus and prefrontal cortex.
27
Q

Effects of Tolerance?

A
  • Appetite suppressing disappears after 2 weeks [ish].
  • Increase in the lethal dosage.
  • Stereotypes and psychotic behaviours increase.
28
Q

Define:

Detoxification

A
  • Abstinence of drug.
  • Relapse is common.
29
Q

Behavioural Therapies?

A
  • Cognitive, contingency, and community reinforcements are commonly used.
30
Q

Pharmacotherapy Examples?

A
  • Modafinil stimulates DA, norepinephrine, and glutamate.
  • Methylphenidate can replace amphetamines.
31
Q

Define:

Ma Huang

A
  • Traditional Chinese medicine for over 5000 years.
  • The source of several natural psychostimulant compounds, such as ephedrine.
32
Q

Vin Miriani:

A
  • A patented a coca-containing wine made by French chemist Angelo Mariani.
33
Q

The Harrison Act?

A
  • Drove cocaine underground.
  • 1914, banned the use of cocaine.
34
Q

Methylphenidate Half Life?

A
  • Age dependent.
  • Kids = 2.5 hours.
  • Adults = 3.5 hours.
35
Q

Define:

Punding

A
  • Stereotyped behaviour in humans, which are stimulus-induced behaviours.
36
Q

Name 4 Psychomotor Stimulants?

A
  1. Amptheamine.
  2. Methamphetamine.
  3. Methcathinone.
  4. Cocaine.
37
Q

Trends in the Annual Rates of Psychostimulant use in the US?

A
  • Cocaine: Decrease, increase, decrease.
  • Meth: slow increase, back to a slow decrease.
  • Ampthetamine: gradual increase.
38
Q

Monoamine Psychosis?

A
  • High doses and extended use of psychostimulants can result in psychosis, which is indistinguishable from schizophrenia.
39
Q

Modafinil?

A
  • Stimulates dopamine, norepinephrine and glutamate neurotransmission.
  • Limited abuse potential.
40
Q

Naltrexone?

A
  • Opioid antagonists.
  • Used in the treatment of alcohol dependence and a drug implant.