Non-Medical Drug Use Flashcards

1
Q

CNS depressants

A

most augment activity at GABAa receptor complex, increasing Cl- influx, hyperpolarizing the cell, which is an inhibitory action. Alcohol, benzos, barbituates, inhalants

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2
Q

alcohol absorption

A

rapidly absorbed by diffusion through membranes. small molecule, so it crosses membranes easily. most is done in small intestine. rate of absorption depends on if stomach is full/empty, and concentration of alcohol

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3
Q

food in stomach does what?

A

dilutes alcohol. delays stomach emptying. increases effective rate of alcohol metabolism (some enzyme oxidation in the stomach, slower delivery to liver)

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4
Q

alcohol distribution

A

total body water! males 63% body water fraction, females 52% body water fraction

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5
Q

alcohol elimination

A

90-90% oxidized (metabolized). routes of elimination: breath, sweat, urine. metabolism is in stomach and liver.

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6
Q

liver metabolism of alcohol

A

Alcohol dehydrogenase: in liver cytoplasm, uses NAD+ as cofactor. Makes acetaldehyde.

Acetaldehyde dehydrogenase: 1 in liver cytoplasm, 2 in liver mitochondria. Plays greatest role in oxidation. Asians lack functional form of ALDH2, causing alcohol sensitivity

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7
Q

what is rate limiting factor for alcohol oxidation?

A

NAD+ supply. this causes zero order kinetics (saturation kinetics)

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8
Q

Cytochrome P-450

A

mixed function oxidase. primarily CYP2E1. More important factor at high levels of alcohol, and with chronic alcohol consumption. induced by chronic exposure to alcohol and barbituates

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9
Q

alcohol mechanism of action

A

CNS. likely binds GABAa and augments GABA, leading to open chloride channels and inhibition due to hyperpolarization. Alcohol and barbs and benzos have cross tolerance

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10
Q

CNS effects of alcohol

A

weak potency. CNS depressant, from drunk to coma to death. blackouts.

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11
Q

Chronic heavy drinking effects

A

fatty liver –> hepatitis –> necroisis –> fibrosis –> Cirrhosis –> hepatic failure –> death. possibly due to constant exposure to acetaldehyde, damaginc membranes and mitochondria. in the heart, moderate alcohol consumption is protective. increases HDL. GI inflammation –> chronic gastritis. decreased testosterone synth -> feminization. uterine motility suppressed, along with milk ejection suppression

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12
Q

fetal alcohol syndrome

A

growth deficiency. dysmorphic characteristics. CNS manifestation: neurobehavioral effects: microcephaly, tremor, seizures, learning problems, memory problems

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13
Q

drug interactions with alcohol

A

acute: metabolism of other drugs may be inhibited if they undergo oxidative metabolism.
chronic: induces P450, thus metabolism of other drugs may be enhanced.

additive CNS depression with other CNS depressants

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14
Q

methyl alcohol

A

formaldehyde and formic acid. highly toxic, leading to acidosis and blindness. treat with ethyl alcohol

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15
Q

ethylene glycol

A

oxidized to oxalic acid which is very toxic to the kidney. leads to renal insufficiency, acidosis, CNS excitement -> depression. treat with ethyl alcohol or alcohol dehydrogenase inhibitor

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16
Q

isopropyl alcohol

A

gastritis, acidosis, CNS symptoms. no antidote, supportive care