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303 Lecture 8 Ch. 5. Artificial & Natural Ligands: Drugs. Chinese Tea Stimulant. Vikings Amanita Muscaria GABA agonist. Drugs have been used for centuries. American Indian Peyote 5HT & DA agonist. Egyptians Beer DA & GABA Agonist 5HT & Glutamate Antagonist .
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303 Lecture 8 Ch. 5 Artificial & Natural Ligands: Drugs
Chinese Tea Stimulant Vikings Amanita Muscaria GABA agonist Drugs have been used for centuries American Indian Peyote 5HT & DA agonist Egyptians Beer DA & GABA Agonist 5HT & Glutamate Antagonist
Not just humans… Animals self administer ETOH coca leaf
Everybody takes drugs!..in one form or another DRUG USE = Ubiquitous 7 out of the 10 of leading causes of disabilities in US Drug Use Major depression Manic Depressive Illness Schizophrenia OCD Dementia Drug Abuse Degenerative CNS
National Surveys • 2/3 of Americans older than 12 drink alcohol • 1/4 of Adult Americans are smokers (~458 pks/year) • 100gm of Caffeine/year • 1/2 of Americans older than 12 have used illicit drugs at least once Marijuana Socially acceptable
College Students YEAR 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 00 01 02 03 Marijuana 27.9 29.3 31.2 33.1 31.6 35.9 35.9 35.2 34.0 35.6 33.7 % Cocaine 2.7 2.0 3.6 2.9 3.4 4.6 4.6 4.8 4.7 4.8 5.4 % Source: University of Michigan, Monitoring the Future National Survey Results on Drug Use, 1975-2003, Volume II: College Students, 2004.
Percent of College Students/Young Adults Using Marijuana,2003–2004 National Institute on Drug Abuse and University of Michigan, Monitoring the Future National Survey Results on Drug Use, 1975–2004, Volume II: College Students & Adults Ages 19–45, 2005
New phenomena: Baby boomer overdosing 197022 yrs 198532 yrs Now 43 yrs Total number of drug mentions in drug abuse-related emergency department visits, by type of drug, 1999-2002
What is a drug? Chemical that alters one or more normal biological processes Psychoactive, Psychotropic Alter behavior, cognitive function or emotions
DRUGS… • Good/Bad???? • How much? • For what reason? • In what context? EX: Heroin SET:Psychological Makeup of person & expectations SETTING: Social physical environment + biochemical unique body chemistry
Tolerance: state of decreased sensitivity to a drug as a result of continued exposure to it Takes more drug to get the same affect effect Dose response curve: shift to the right dose
Tolerance??? compensatorymechanisms that opposethe effects of the drug Biological Tolerance: Two Types metabolic tolerance : the body increases its ability to get rid of the drug e.g. an increase in the level of enzymes in the body that break down the drug physiological tolerance: may involve compensatory changes at a synaptic level VERY IMPORTANT!!! Setting: Social, physical environmental
Seigel et al. (1982) Tested the hypothesis that setting is important in drug tolerance Heroin can be conditioned to the environment 30 days of heroin in varying environments Group 1 Group 2 Group 3 Heroin (colony) Placebo (colony) Placebo (colony) Placebo (noisy room) Heroin (noisy room) Placebo (noisy room) All animal injected with lethal dose (15mg/kg) Colony noisy room colony noisy room colony noisy room 64% died 96% died Only 32% died
Lethal effects when drug was taken in new environment (no compensatory) Conditioned Drug Response: tolerance effects (compensatory: work against drug) are maximally shown when drug taken in same situation/ environment
Tolerance??? compensatorymechanisms that opposethe effects of the drug Withdrawal symptoms are compensatory reactions in the body that oppose the
Psychopharmacology: Study of drugs on NS behavior What Determines Drug Efficacy? • PHARMACOKINETICS • Absorbed bloodstream • Distributed bloodstream • Metabolized broken down • Eliminated Urine, sweat feces, mother’s milk
Pharmacokinetics • routes of administration • Absorbed IV • Distributed IP • Metabolized IM • Eliminated PO Sublingual Site of Action inhalation
PO: Most common, easiest, safe, cheapest • Swallowed • Stomach (enzymes) bloodstream • Intestine (alcohol) • Liver Bloodstream Unpredictable & time consuming
PO (Cons) • absorbed more slowly..not good for emergencies • need to be awake..choke • need bigger doses • irritate stomach …eat food Inhalation: quick, lungs • Lung damage • Not precise IV: Strong effect, fast (15 sec) • Overdose • Scar tissue/ collapse of veins • Infections IM: Muscle • more rapid/PO • hurts!! …What else impacts Efficacy of a drug?
Weight Circadian cycle Genetic Makeup Drug Efficacy Food Intake Age loradadine(Claritin) Aspirin Polypharmacy Sunlight ~12 meds Immune system
After IV injection • Hi [ ] in blood but quickly leaves to other tissue • After leaving blood…to muscle…greatest [ ] because • lots of muscle • Although Fat highly vascularized…drug stays longer
Site of Action Very Important BBB: lipid-solubility Quick distribution Ex: Morphine vs Heroin = efficacy but…. Varying site of action for the same effect Ex: Morphine vs Aspirin Analgesic suppresses neurons increases chemical
Depressants, Sedatives, Anxiolytics Alcohol Barbiturates Benzodiazapines
Alcohol (ethanol) • small & lipophillic • Depressant • Mod: Cog, perceptual, verbal motor impairment • High: unconscious > 0.5 % death from respiratory depression Decrease Neuronal Firing Mod-Hi Low Stimulate neuronal firing
Alcohol’s Immediate Effects on NT GABA Agonist Sedation, incoordination Glutamate Antagonist Memory loss & Cog dysfunction 5HT Antagonist Impulsiveness,violent behaviors, sleepiness DA Agonist Reinforces alcohol habitat Dilation of blood vessels red face Urination diuretic urine by kidneys
Alcohol stimulate the release of endogenous opioids • Endogenous opioids (e.g., beta-endorphin) are released into the synapse • stimulate activity at opiate receptors, which produces a signal in the target neuron • Exogenous opiates (morphine) stimulate opiate receptors
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wDcyBXJAZNM • Alcohol (ethanol) • Korsakoff’s Syndrome: memory loss sensory motor dysfunction, dementia Binges: no Vitamins…carbohydrates Brain damage due to thiamine (vitamin B1) Brain needs thiamine to metabolize glucose • Shrinkage of neurons Mamillary bodies, Hippocampus
Depressants, Sedatives, Anxiolytics Barbiturates Benzodiazapines
Barbiturates: (0ld drug: 1903) • Sedation Phenobarbital anticonvulsant • Sleep inducing Pentobarbital • Anesthesia • Muscle relaxant Indirect agonist GABA the duration of CL- channels (hyperpolarize) “Drugged” next day…reduce respiration Replaced by BENZODIAZEPINES
Benzodiazepines: • First BZ patented in 1959 • Chlordiazepoxide (Librium) • greater muscle relaxant properties vs respiratory effect • anxiolytic Indirect agonist GABA BARBITS: the duration of CL- channels (hyperpolarize) BZ: the frequency of CL- channels (hyperpolarize) Diazapam (Valium) - No “Drugged” next day Alprazolam (Xanax)
Psychostimulants Cocaine Amphetamine Caffeine
Cocaine • local anesthetic and CNS stimulant • coca bush • lipid soluable • Neurological and Behavioral problems: • dizziness • headache • movement problems • anxiety • insomnia • depression • hallucinations • Behavioral Effects: • euphoria • excitement • reduced hunger • a feeling of strength • friendly, outgoing
Caudate Nucleus VTA Nucleus Accumbens Cocaine concentrates especially in the reward areas. Cocaine accumulation in caudate nucleus can explain other effects such as increased stereotypic behaviors (pacing, nail-biting, scratching, etc).
Cocaine • Agonist of Catecholamines • Blocks reuptake of DA, Norepi, Epi to presynaptic terminal PNS: constricts of blood vessels dilation of pupils irregular HB
Reuptake pumps DA Cocaine DA receptors
PET Scan red = high use of glucose yellow = medium use blue = least use of glucose cocaine user do not use (metabolize) glucose as effectively as the brain of the normal person = Risk of Stroke & Epilepsy
D2 Receptors in Monkeys Cocaine – Environment alters receptors Subordinate Subordinate Dominant Dominant
Patient died of an overdose of cocaine – DA constricts brain vessels • small lesions • acute hemorrhages • hypoxia (lack of oxygen) - cell death, or strokes - can happen in heart = infarction or attack (sudden death).
Psychostimulants Amphetamine Caffeine
Amphetamines (stimulant): • http://www.psych.ualberta.ca/~ITL/flash/stimulants_draft.swf • CNS & Sympathetic NS (asthma, sleep disorders) • cause the release of dopamine from axon terminals • block dopamine reuptake • inhibit the storage of dopamine in vesicles . dextroamphetamine, benzedrine, and Ritalin • Short-term effects: • Increased heart rate • Increased blood pressure • Reduced appetite • Dilation of the pupils • Feelings of happiness and power • Reduced fatigue
CAFFEINE • - most popular drug in the world • coffee, tea, cocoa, chocolate, some soft drinks, • & drugs • - coffee bean, tea leaf, kola nut and cocoa pod • - Pure caffeine is odorless and has a bitter taste • increase alertness • reduce fine motor coordination • cause insomnia • cause headaches, nervousness and dizziness
www.youtube.com/watch?v=JP7EQ6e5d1c • What NT does caffeine affect: • Adenosine • inhibitory of synaptic transmission • Caffeine antagonist of Adenosine • Increase firing of cortical neurons & locus coeruleus (regulator of arousal & vigilance) (RAS) http://www.psych.ualberta.ca/~ITL/flash/stimulants_draft.swf Caffeine also: increase heart rate, constrict blood vessels, relax air passages to improve breathing and allow some muscles to contract more easily
Massive Doses: Fatal! 10 grams 80-100 cups of coffee in rapid succession (U.S. = avg. 100g/yr) 160mg Coffee: 60-150 mg Coca-Cola: 46 Pepsi: 38 Chocolate: 1-35 (U.S. = 200-300mg/day) Vivarin, Excedrin, Dextrim, Dristan, No Doz