Module 25: Psychoactive Drugs Flashcards

1
Q

Psychoactive Drugs

A

Chemical substances that alter perceptions and moods

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2
Q

Substance Abuse Disorder

A

A disorder characterized by continued substance craving and use despite significant life disruption and/or physical risk

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3
Q

How many indicators of substance use is needed to have mild substance use disorder?

A

2-3 indicators

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4
Q

How many indicators of substance use is needed to have moderate substance use disorder?

A

4-5 indiators

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5
Q

How many indicators of substance use is needed to have sever substance use disorder?

A

6+ indicators

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6
Q

Tolerance

A

The diminishing effect with regular use of the same dose of a drug, requiring the user to take larger and larger doses before experiencing the drug’s effects

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7
Q

Addiction

A

A primary, chronic disease of brain reward, motivation, memory and related circuitry

  • inability to consistently abstain, impairment in behavioral control, craving, diminished recognition of significant problems with one’s behaviors and interpersonal relationships, and a dysfunctional emotional response
  • want the drug more than like the drug
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8
Q

How can tolerance lead to substance abuse disorder?

A

Due to neuroadaptation, brain chemistry changes to offset the effects of the drug. Users require larger and larger doses which increases the risk of becoming addicted and developing a substance abuse disorder.

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9
Q

Withdrawl

A

The discomfort & distress that occurs after discontinuing an addictive drug or behavior

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10
Q

How has the concept of addiction changed?

A

Some behaviors can become compulsive & dysfunctional- similar to problematic alcohol & drug use
- examples: gambling disorder, internet gaming disorder, internet disorder (some need more studying done)

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11
Q

What are the three major categories of psychoactive drugs?

A

Depressants
Stimulants
Hallucinogens

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12
Q

What are depressants? Effects?

A

Drugs that reduce neural activity & slow body functions

ex: alcohol, barbiturates, & opiates

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13
Q

How does alcohol interact with neurotransmitters?

A

GABA & GLUTAMATE both interact with alcohol to produce the effects we associate with drinking - impaired judgements, slow reaction time, disrupts formation of memory, & impulse control

  • Alcohol enhances GABA capabilities (agonist) and inhibits glutamate from exciting the cells (antagonist)
  • affects prefrontal cortex
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14
Q

How does alcohol use disorder change the structure of the brain?

A

Ventricles, areas filled of fluid, are enlarged

- brain shrinkage

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15
Q

How does alcohol impair memory & self-awareness?

A
  • Memory disruption: Suppresses REM sleep which is needed for memory consolidation alcohol can disrupt memory formation and heavy drinking can also have long-term effects on the brain & cognition
  • Reduced self - awareness: People who consume alcohol doze off/ mind wander more w/o realizing
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16
Q

What are expectancy effects?

A

Expectations influences behavior - believing we are drinking alcohol causes us to act under its influence.

17
Q

Barbiturates

A

Drugs that depress central nervous system activity, reducing anxiety but impairing memory and judgement

ex: Nembutal, Seconal, & Amytal
- sometimes prescribed to induce sleep or reduce anxiety.

18
Q

Opiates

A

Drugs that depress neural activity & temporarily lessen pain and anxiety

  • pupils constrict, breathing slows, person becomes lethargic
    ex: Morphine & heroin
19
Q

How can opiate addiction lead to death?

A

When repeatedly flooded with artificial opiates, the brain stops producing endorphins ( natural opiates). When the artificial opiate is withdrawn the brain with lack the normal level of painkilling neurotransmitters - then die of overdose

20
Q

What are stimulants? Effects?

A

Drugs that excite neural activity and speed up body functions
ex: caffeine, nicotine, amphetamines, methamphetamine, ecstasy/molly

21
Q

Why do people use stimulants?

A
  • to feel alert
  • lose weight
  • boost mood
  • boost athletic performance
22
Q

What is nicotine?

A

A stimulant - highly additive psychoactive drug found in tobacco

  • arousal, relaxation, sense of well-being
  • heart disease & cancer
23
Q

What are the physiological effects of nicotine?

A

Nicotine reaches the brain within 7 seconds twice as fast as intravenous heroin

24
Q

What is cocaine?

A

A strong & addictive stimulant that temporarily increased alertness & euphoria

  • enters the bloodstream quickly, producing a rush of euphoria that depletes the brain’s supply of neurotransmitters dopamine, serotonin, & norepinephrine.
  • risk cardiovascular stress, suspiciousness, depressive crash
25
Q

How does cocaine impact normal neural transmission?

A
  • binds to sites that usually reabsorb neurotransmitters molecules
  • blocks reuptake of dopamine, serotonin, & norepinephrine
26
Q

How does cocaine cause euphoria?

A
  • blocking binding site leaves the neurotransmitters in the synapse intensifying their mood altering effects
27
Q

What is methamphetamine?

A

A strong addictive drug that stimulates the central nervous system, with accelerated body functions and associated energy and mood changes; over time, appears to reduce baseline dopamine levels
- aftereffects: irritability, insomnia, hypertension, seizures, social isolation, depression, violent out burst

28
Q

What is Ecstasy (MDMA)?

A

A synthetic stimulant & mild hallucinogen

  • produces euphoria & social intimacy; short term health risk; long term harm to serotonin producing neurons, mood, & cognition
  • dehydrating effects, can lead to severe overheating, increased blood pressure, death
  • long term use risk permanently depressed mood
  • suppresses the immune system, impairs memory, slows thought, and disrupts sleep
29
Q

How does Ecstasy (MDMA) work?

A

As an amphetamine derivative, Ecstasy triggers dopamine release, but its major effect is releasing stored serotonin and blocking its reuptake, thus prolonging serotonin’s feel-good flood.

30
Q

What are hallucinogens? Effects?

A

psychedelic drugs that distort perceptions and evoke sensory images in the absence of sensory input
ex: LSD

31
Q

Hallucinations

A

Distorted perceptions and sensory images in the absence of sensory input

32
Q

Near-Death experiences

A

An altered state of consciousness reported after a close brush with death
- can resemble drug-induced hallucinations

33
Q

What is LSD (Lysergic acid diethylamide)

A

Strong hallucinogenic drug

  • vary in reactions: some get strong euphoric feeling while others feel detachment, some panic.
  • users’ mood & expectation influence the emotional experiences but the perceptual distortions and hallucinations have commonalities
34
Q

What is Marijuana? THC?

A

Marijuana is a mild hallucinogen - amplifies sensitivity to colors, sounds, tastes, and smells

  • relaxes, disinhibits, pain relief, distortion of time
  • could create a euphoric high
  • impaired learning & memory ; increased risk of psychological disorders.

THC: psychoactive ingredient - produces mixed effects

35
Q

Alcool

A

Depressant

  • initial high followed by relaxation and disinhibition
  • Depression, memory loss, organ damage, impaired reactions
36
Q

Heroin

A

Depressant

  • rush of euphoria & pain relief
  • depressed physiology, agonizing withdrawal
37
Q

Caffeine

A

Stimulant

  • increased alertness & wakefulness
  • anxiety, restlessness, insomnia (in high doses), uncomfortable withdrawal