Morphine, Heroin
Commonly Abused Opiates
Heroin Oxycontin Percocet Vicodin Methadone Morphine
HEROIN
chemically known as diacetylmorphine is considered a prodrug because it is broken down into an active drug
Endorphins
feel-good chemicals naturally-manufactured in the brain when the body experiences pain or stress
John Hopkins
found human brain's neurons had specific receptor sites for opiate drugs: opium, heroin, and morphine.
Naloxone
opiate antagonist which reverses opiate overdoses
Naltrexone
opioid antagonist. Blocks the action of opioids Not addictive or sedating Patients have trouble complying with the TX though.
MORPHINE
Low oral bioavailability (25%): the degree and rate at which a substance (as a drug) is absorbed into the circulatory system crosses into the brain slower than drugs like heroin; addicted person would always choose heroin other than this
Morphine & Heroin
Main effects: activation of the dopaminergic system & opioid system
Buprenorphine
partial opioid agonist slow acting opioid Taken orally so reaches brain slowly Heroin addicts are put on this wean them off of heroin replaces the heroin without giving the "rush" If the addict tries to take heroin, the methadone blocks the euphoric effects of it Eventually the addict's neurotransmitter production returns to normal if they can avoid taking heroin