Drug and Behavioral Psych Exam 2
Subcutaneous
Usually used for allergies tests Just under the skin (heroin is now being taken this way)
Parenteral
Veins to heart, to lungs, to heart, to brain/body
Dose-Response Curve
When tolerance is present, the dose response curve is shifted to the right A graph comparing the size of response to the amount of drug
Inhalation of gases
Whippets Usually short-lived and temporary
What's the difference between the effects of alcohol and other depressants compared to opioids?
With opioids there's a clouding of consciousness without the recklessness abandon, staggering, and slurred speech
Is tolerance reversible?
Yes!! Gradually decreases as you decrease use of the drug
Besides the psychological effects, what other effects are reliably produced by peyote?
"Bad trips" vomiting/violent sickness, convulsions
Find the therapeutic index if the LD50 is 100 and the ED50 is 10. What does this mean?
100/10 = 10. The therapeutic index is 10. This means you'd have to take 10 times the ED50 dose to have a 50% chance of dying
What were the approximate dates and who where the combatants in the Opium Wars?
1839, Britain and China
Nuvigil (armodafinil)
A longer-lasting version of modafinil, approved to treat the same conditions
Provigil (modafinil)
A medication used to treat narcolepsy, shift work sleep disorder, and daytime sleepiness associated with sleep apnea
Generic
A name that specifies a particular chemical, but not a particular brand - in the public domain, meaning they cannot be trademarked
If an elderly person has less protein in the blood than a younger person, how would you adjust the dose of a drug that has high protein binding?
ANSWER ME
Potency
Absolute number of molecules of drug required to cause a response Basically a fancy way of saying dose required Less molecules binding to get effects of drug means it's more potent
Will there be a difference in the response to a drug if a very small person and a very large person take the same amount?
Absolutely. Men and women also metabolize alcohol differently
Placebo
An inactive drug
Intracranial Self-Stimulation (ICSS)
Animals work at high rates to obtain ICSS Animals prefer ICSS over food, water, sex ICSS enhances the rewarding properties of food, water, sex Areas of the brain that best support ICSS are those of the natural reward circuits
Drugs that don't maintain self-administration
Aspirin, haloperidol, lidocaine, LSD, mescaline (not reinforcing)
Incentive Sensitization Theory
Attempts to explain drug craving Stimuli that activates the mesolimbic dopamine system have incentive Salience occurs: the stimulus is attended to by the organism, the stimulus motivates behavior towards it, the organism "WANTS" the stimulus With repeated use, a drug will acquire greater incentive value (sensitization)
What do you study with humans in a lab?
Basic effects of a drug: HR, respiration, etc, where it works in the brain (PET, fMRI) Self-reported effects of the drug: Do people like it? What do they tell you happens? Choice Behavior: Do they choose to take the drug? Alternate actual drug and placebo for 4 days, on 4th ask which one they want Are people willing to work for a drug? Treatment Options: medicinal and behavioral Cognition, driving (in a simulator), motor, and perception effects
Why should LD(50) always be greater than ED(50)?
Because LD(50) is the lethal dose where as ED(50) is the effective meaning. There should be a BIG difference between the two because if they're close, it'll be easier to cross into the lethal dose when trying to reach the effective dose
Why might nonspecific factors influence psychoactive drug effects more than the effect of an antibiotic?
Because with psychoactive drugs, the influences of expectancy, experience, and setting are also important determinants of the drug's effects
Which of the hallucinogenic plants was most associate with witchcraft?
Belladonna
Morton's makes table salts, also known as sodium chloride. What's the chemical name, generic name, and brand name?
Chemical: Sodium Chloride Generic: Table Salt Brand: Morton's Table Salt
What is the neuronal evidence of the Incentive Sensitization Theory?
Chronic use of several drugs of abuse increases glutamatergic (excitatory) input onto dopamine neurons in the VTA Also occurs with the stimuli associated with drug of abuse - stuff related to drug as well as drug itself (paraphernalia, location, and people you do it with)
Pharmacodynamic tolerance
Decrease in reactivity in the target site
Metabolic tolerance
Decrease in the amount of drug reaching the target site
LD1
Dose that's lethal for 1% of the population
What type of procedure must be conducted during human drug research?
Double Blind Procedure
Why and when did private and public physicians stop maintaining dependent individuals with morphine and other opioids?
During the 1920s under pressure from federal officials
ED50
Effective dose for 50% of the population
ED99
Effective dose for 99% of the population
What are the enkephalins and endorphins and how do they relate to plant-derived opioids such as morphine?
Endorphins: morphine-like neurotransmitters found in the brain and pituitary gland enkephalins: morphine-like neurotransmitters found in the brain and adrenals Both have potent opioid effects. They have actions on at least 3 types of opioid receptors
Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee (IACUC)
Ensures federal regulations for animal care and use are maintained on camp Any experiments using animals must be approved by this committee Any individuals with animals must complete training
Drugs that maintain self-adminisration
Ethanol, nicotine, PCP, THC (reinforcing) Everything's IV minus ethanol (want to model humans drinking)
What was the significance of De Quincy's writing about opium eating?
Even in the early 19th century, a period when many contemporary observers tend to regard as one with few drug use moral strictures, he felt compelled to provide justification for his daily use of opium. He also detailed the pains of opium withdrawal.
Double-blind procedure:
Experiment in which neither the doctor nor the patient knows which drug is being used
Cross Tolerance
Exposure to ne drug can produce tolerance to another drug
Who studied Placebo Effects?
Filmore & Vogel-Sprott
What are the three different Ratio Schedules and define?
Fixed: reward every 5 bar presses Variable: number of presses vary (usually best option because they just keep pressing) Progressive Ratio: fixed schedule that gets more demanding - 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, 64
Rectal Administration....yeah
For unconscious, vomiting, or unable to swallow Alcohol and meth are the 2 big ones right now - if alcohol is taken rectally, it will initially bypass metabolism in the liver Quickly goes into blood stream - nothing is metabolized, so it's much stronger!! Actually blow higher on a breathalyzer test! CAN SOAK A TAMPON
Who did a TON of work on the Incentive Sensitization Theory?
George Koob and Barradge
Why do people say that LSD is one of the most potent psychoactive drugs?
Hallucinogenic effects can be obtained with 50 micrograms, compared with several milligrams required of other hallucinogens and only 1% actually reaches the brain.
Psychoactive Drugs
Hallucinogens, stimulants, nicotine, psychotherapeutics, opioids, depressants, marijuana
Therapeutic Index
Idea of drug's toxicity - what's the chance that someone will OD on the drug LD50/ED50 is the equation used
What can be concluded from the evidence regarding the neurotoxic effects of MDMA?
In animals the serotonin neurons can be destroyed, but the relevance of this and related findings for human recreational use is unclear. Recreational MDMA users don't typically use large doses as large as those used in animal experiments and when the cognitive abilities of these users is compared with education and age-matches counterparts, they perform equally well
When are chemical names of drugs most commonly used?
In laboratory situations where biochemists or pharmacologists are developing and testing new drugs
Variability slope
Individual differences in drug response Steeper slope typically means less variability
What are the three different types of inhalation?
Inhalation of gases, inhalation of solids, inhalation of smoke
Intraperitoneal
Injected into abdominal cavity - rabies shot and animal research use this
WHo must approve any research done on humans?
Institutional Review Board (IRB)
Intravenous
Into vein - fastest into system into brain!! Widely used
Which route of administration gets a drug to the brain most quickly?
Intravenous (IV) injections because the drug is put directly in the blood stream
What are the strengths of the Incentive Sensitization Theory?
It explains the development of addiction Explains craving Also helps to explain why people still want a drug, even when they now longer "like" it
How is it possible that heroin was at first sold as a nonaddicting pain reliever?
It was originally used as a cough suppressant and also helped block pain. There wasn't enough information out yet about their addictive problems
Why was LSD used in psychoanalysis in the 1950s and 1960s? How does this relate to its proposed use by the Army & CIA?
It was thought to be able to access the "subconscious mind." It was used as an adjunct to psychotherapy. It took over as a modern truth serum. They though tit could help prisoners tell the truth and also possibly make soldiers focus more (it most definitely did not).
How do you describe drug doses?
It's important to use a common metric system that everyone investigating the certain drug can observe similar results
Lipid solubility
Lipid soluble drugs pass through membranes easily Stays in lipids outside of the CNS Ionized molecules are NOT lipid soluble
Contrast MDMA and PCP in terms of how they appear to make people feel about being close to others.
MDMA increases openness and empathy, increases sociability and euphoria PCP has reports of violence....so no social
Efficacy
Maximum effect obtainable additional doses produce no more effect (taking 6 Advil won't make any more of a difference than 4...or whatever its max is)
What are the 3 main types of tolerance?
Metabolic, Pharmacodynamic, and behavioral
Why doesn't morphine have the same effect in mice and humans?
Mice metabolize drugs at a different rate (faster) than humans
What is the effective dose?
Minimal dose necessary to produce the intended drug effect in a given percentage of the population
How might two drugs interact with each other through actions of the CYP450 enzyme system?
Modern antidepressant drugs have a high affinity for one of the CYP450 enzymes and "occupy" the enzyme molecules, so they effectively inhibit the enzyme's action on any other drug. Now a previously safe dose of blood pressure medication/cough syrup suppressant results in much higher blood levels that could be dangerous.
What two chemicals are extracted from the opium poppy?
Morphine and codeine
Inhalation of smoke
Nicotine, cocaine (crack), methamphetamine (ice) Really only best in pure form!
Are drug effects due to the absolute amount of drug administered?
No. The effect of a drug is related to is CONCENTRATION in the body
Where is the dose presented on the dose response curve?
On the horizontal axis
Where is the size of effect or percentage affected usually on a dose response curve?
On the vertical axis
What were some of the lessons learned about heroin dependence as a result of the Vietnam experience?
Opioid dependence and compulsive use aren't inevitable among occasional users and under certain conditions - availability and low cost of drug, limited sanctions, stress - a relatively high percentage of individuals will use opioids recreationally
Into which major category does each of these drugs fall: heroin, cocaine, alcohol, LSD, Prozac?
Opioids: Heroin Stimulant: Cocaine Depressant: Alcohol Hallucinogens: LSD Prozac: Psychotherapeutics
What are the issues that must be focused on during Human Drug Research?
Participation MUST be voluntary! No coercion Deception must be reviewed Debriefing - tell you what happened
Transdermal
Patch Trying to get around abuse Sometimes people can scratch off the coating on the patches and use that to get high
Which type of tolerance is related to physical dependence and why?
Pharmacodynamic tolerance because it leads not only to a reduced effectiveness of the drug, but also to these withdrawal reactions.
What MUST participants have for drug use research?
Prior (proven biologically) history of drug use Medical staff MUST be available Participants mMUST be completely sober prior to exiting the facility
What's the active agent in the "Magic Mushrooms" of Mexico and is it an indole or a catechol?
Psilocybin; indole
Tolerance
Repeated exposure to a drug produces a decrease in sensitivity to the drug
Intramuscular
Right into a muscle - usually a large one
What are some of the many factors that influence drug effect
Route of administration, metabolism, tolerance
Which hallucinogen acts as an agonist at the Kappa opiate receptors?
Salvia Divinorum
Explain why taking opioids in combo with sedatives isn't advised
Sedatives alone are depressants and combined with opioids - a depressant as well - the entire system could become too depressed and shut down (a.k.a. death)
"Reverse Tolerance"
Sensitization: some effects an actually increase i sensitivity. These become sensitized Lower dose required to obtain the effect Shift to the left in the dose response curve Happens with meth
Inhalation of solids
Snorting Cocaine, metamphetamine, tranquilizer Ketamine ("Special K"), etc.
Oral
Stomach/Intestine to liver (metabolism) to blood, to veins, to heart, to lungs, to heart to brain/body First pass metabolism
What are the four different ways of injection?
Subcutaneous, intramuscular, intraperitoneal, and intravenous
Oral Administration
Swallow......duh Aspirin, pot brownies, mushrooms, LSD Very slow onset - has to be processed out of tummy Very effective for analgesics; slowly absorbed; therefore, it's easy to maintain constant levels in the blood
Who controls brand names?
The FDA - overly suggestive ones aren't approved
LD50
The dose that's lethal for 50% of the population
What is the diagnostic term for "flashbacks"?
The individual hasn't used the drug recently, but has re-experienced one or more of the perceptual symptoms experienced while intoxicated
What is one of the most profitable industries in the US with sales exceeding $290 billion a year?
The legal pharmaceutical industry
What is the lethal dose?
The minimal dose necessary to produce death in a given percentage of the population
Absorption
The movement of a drug from the site of administration to the blood Drugs are distributed throughout the body by the blood
What does the Institutional Review Board view as the highest priority and what do they weigh?
The right of the participants is highest priority They weigh the costs and benefits
What is the effect of a narcotic agonist on someone who has developed a physical dependence on opioids?
These antagonists can precipitate immediate withdrawals syndrome. This can prevent dependent individuals from experiencing a high if they use heroin -- blocks/reverses the depressed symptoms
What are the distinctions among phantastica, deliriants, psychedelics, psychotomimethics, entheogens, and hallucinogens?
They all create an altered state of reality (perception)
How did the typical opioid abuser change from the early 1900s to the 1920s?
They grew from simple daily medicine to low-class criminals willing to do anything to get their drug.
Selective Tolerance
Tolerance develops to some drug effects, but not to others
Behavioral
Tolerance occurs in the same environment the drug as administered If you move to a new environment, your tolerance will be lower Also called context specific tolerance
Describe the dependence potential of LSD in terms of tolerance, physical dependence, and psychological dependence.
Tolerance: develops rapidly as well as cross tolerance (recovery also happens rapidly). Physical: none Psychological: none really, but can get addicted to the feeling or want to experience the "trip" more and more because it can make a person feel more serene or creative
True or False: You develop tolerance quicker with IV
True
