Hallucinogens Flashcards

1
Q

What is the most common way people take acid?

A

Orally

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2
Q

What is the half life of acid and the effect of onset?

A

3 hours; 45 minutes

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3
Q

What is the effective and street dose of acid?

A

20 mg, 50-300 mg

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4
Q

How long do the effects of acid last?

A

4-12 hours

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5
Q

What are the major clinical manifestations?

A

Perceptual distortions and switched senses (hearing colors, seeing smells)

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6
Q

What are two cool, good features of acid?

A

Euphoria and expanded consciousness

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7
Q

What is the primary NT system involved in acid?

A

serotonergic systems

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8
Q

Most focus has been on the ____ receptor

A

5HT-2

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9
Q

Acid doesn’t cause permanent damage (T/F)

A

True

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10
Q

What does acid unmask?

A

Psychiatric vulnerabilities/ depression/paranoid behavior

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11
Q

What is the ED treatment of acid?

A

Chill out with em and support em for a minute, maybe give em benzos

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12
Q

Magic mushrooms and mescaline have similar effects to what?

A

LSD

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13
Q

PCP effects include which kind of appearance?

A

Unsettling, disturbed affect with rigid muscles

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14
Q

What is wet in reference to PCP

A

A joint soaked in PCP

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15
Q

What is the standard dose of PCP

A

5mg

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16
Q

What is the onset time, plateau time, time of effect for PCP?

A

5, 45, and 4-6 hours

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17
Q

How long can the PCP duration be?

A

24-48 hours

18
Q

The main effects of PCP are (3)

A

Euphoria, disconnected from world, flat affect

19
Q

A major clinical sign of PCP is

A

nystagmus

20
Q

To combat fatal PCP overdose , what should you use?

A

High potency first generation antipsychotic

21
Q

What are signs of a PCP overdose (4)

A

Muscle rigidity, Hostility, excess salivation without gag, increased BP

22
Q

What is the underlying mechanism of PCP

A

NMDA receptor antagonist, blocks Glu

23
Q

Is there permanent side effects of PCP

A

No, but chronic use results in dulled thinking/reflexes

24
Q

2 solutions for PCP overdose

A

Benzos and acidification of urine

25
Q

What is the dose of Molly?

A

75-300 mg

26
Q

Three clinical manifestations of molly?

A

Cognitive and perceptual disturbances, increased anxiety

27
Q

Why do people use pacifiers on molly?

A

To mitigate the effect of bruxism, or jaw clenching

28
Q

What two NTs does MDMA increase the vesicular release of?

A

Serotonin and dopamine

29
Q

Does MDMA cause fever?

A

probably not, likely an effect of the environment

30
Q

Chronic use of molly destroys _____ pathways

A

serotonergic

31
Q

Molly can cause ____ but rarely needs emergency treatment

A

dehydration

32
Q

What is a major effect of anticholinergics?

A

Waxing and waning of consciousness

33
Q

Anticholinergics can make patients ______, and they may need restraints because of their agitations

A

delirious; restraintants

34
Q

What is the major ocular sign of anticholinergic toxcicity

A

Fixed, dilated pupils

35
Q

Treatment of anticholinergic toxicity?

A

stop offending agent and restrain patient if needed

36
Q

Who loves to huff?

A

Ladies

37
Q

Ocular sign of huffing?

A

nystagmus

38
Q

What is another sign of huffing?

A

muscular incoordination

39
Q

What receptor is huffing mediated through

A

GABA-A

40
Q

What is a major CNS symptom of huffing?

A

Demyelination and cerebellar atrophy