Cocaine and nicotine Flashcards

1
Q

What sort of compound is nicotine?

A

Alkaloid

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2
Q

In what part of the cigarette is nicotine present?

A

Dissolved in tar/ particulate matter which makes up 5% of the cigarette

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3
Q

How much nicotine is present in 1 typical cigarette

A

9-17mg

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4
Q

What % of nicotine in a cigarette will reach the bloodstream?

A

20%

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5
Q

Why is there no buccal absorption of nictotine?

A

Smoke = acidic

Nicotine has a pKa of 7.9 - therefore pushed towards ionised form and not absorbed

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6
Q

Compare the levels of nicotine in the blood produced by a cigarette vs a replacement method

A
Cigarette = spike and then persists at intermediate level
Replacement = constant intermediate level
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7
Q

Where is nicotine metabolised, what is its main breakdown product and where is this excreted?

A

Liver, cotinine, urine

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8
Q

Why does nicotine stimulate the mesolimbic system?

A

nAChR agonist

Binds to nAChR In VTA to stimulate DA release in NA

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9
Q

Recall the 4 key effects of nicotine on the CVS

A

nAChR agonism –> increased sympathetic output –>

  1. Increased cardiac work
  2. reduced flow in coronary arterioles due to vasoconstriction
  3. Worsening effect on lipid profile
  4. Increases TXA2 –> increased platelet aggregation
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10
Q

Recall and explain the 3 possible benefits of nicotine

A
  1. Depresses weight gain
  2. Increases brain cytochromes for cytotoxin metabolism so reduces Parkinson’s risk
  3. Decreases beta-amyloid toxicity –> reduced risk of Alzheimer’s
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11
Q

What was the main method of cocaine administration prior to crack cocaine?

A

Cocaine HCl - but this breaks down when heated

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12
Q

How is crack cocaine produced?

A

Cocaine HCl is precipitated with an alkaline solution and dissolved in a non-polar solvemt

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13
Q

Where is crack cocaine absorbed when taken orally, and why?

A

Small intestine as pKa is 8.7

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14
Q

What is the half-life of crack cocaine?

A

20-90 minutes

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15
Q

Why is the half life of cocaine so short?

A

Metabolised in liver and also by cholinesterases in blood

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16
Q

What is cocaine metabolised to produce?

A

2 inactive metabolite

17
Q

Why do the pharmacokinetics of cocaine make it so addictive?

A

Super-fast onset when inhaled = powerful reinforcer

Fast breakdown causes people to binge

18
Q

What is the major clinical use of cocaine, and what is the method of action?

A

Local anaesthetic

Blocks Na+ channels in nerves at HIGH DOSE

19
Q

What is the main low-dose effect of cocaine in the brain?

A

Reuptake inhibition of 5HT, DA and NA - prolonging effect of DA in NA and thus producing euphoria

20
Q

Other than euphoria, recall 3 short-term effects of cocaine

A

Stimulant
Sleep disturbance
Increased aggression and self-esteem

21
Q

How does tolerance to cocaine develop?

A

Exhaustion of mediator stores as no DA is re-uptaken so there is no substrate for DA production

22
Q

Recall 3 CVS side effects of cocaine use

A

SNS output increase –> work increased
Endothelin 1 upregulation –> coronary spasm
Thrombocytophilia

23
Q

What is the most common side-effect of cocaine use and why is this?

A

Seizures

Induced by hyperpyrexic effect increasing cellular activity in the brain