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Chapter 4

Chapter 4. Alcohol and Inhalants of Abuse. Preview. We will discus the phamacokinetics and phamacodynamics of alcohol How there is tolerance and cross tolerance of alcohol Why there is a Psychological dependence for chronic users What treatment for alcohol dependance. Preview .

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Chapter 4

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  1. Chapter 4 Alcohol and Inhalants of Abuse

  2. Preview • We will discus the phamacokinetics and phamacodynamics of alcohol • How there is tolerance and cross tolerance of alcohol • Why there is a Psychological dependence for chronic users • What treatment for alcohol dependance

  3. Preview • What are inhalants • Why are they abused • What are the effects of inhalants • What are some treatments

  4. What is Alcohol? • Alcohol is a sedative • It’s is primarily used for recreation not medicine • 2nd Largest used psychoactive drug in the world (first is caffeine)

  5. Alcohol’s chemical composition CH3 CH2OH Yellow – H Black – C Red – O

  6. The Phamacokinetics of Alcohol - Absorption • Alcohol is both soluble in fat and water • This means alcohol is absorbed though the gastrointestinal tract and through the Blood Brain barrier • 20% is absorbed through the stomach the other 80% through the upper intestine

  7. The Phamacokinetics of Alcohol - Distribution • Alcohol easily crosses the Blood-Brain barrier because it is lipid soluble • Alcohol can even cross the placental barrier where there can be an occurrence of fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS). FAS occurs in 30% to 50% of all alcoholic mothers

  8. The Phamacokinetics of Alcohol – Metabolism and Excrection • 95% of all alcohol is digested (metabolized) by an enzyme called alcohol dehydrogenase • 85% via the liver • 15% via the stomach – a full stomach can metabolize more • Alcohol is exposed to first-pass metabolism • 5% is excreted via the lungs

  9. Metabolism of Alcohol by Men and Women • Since men have naturally less fat then woman and bigger blood vesicles, men have a lower Blood Alcohol Concentration (BAC) then woman • Also, woman have 50% less enzyme then men, thus the metabolism rate is slower • Remember – Alcohol metabolism is zero order

  10. 10 Non-alcoholic Women 10 Alcoholic Women Intravenous Oral 300 300 Blood ethanol concentrations (mM) 10 10 Non-alcoholic Men Alcoholic Men 300 300 Time after ethanol administration (minutes)

  11. How the Liver Metabolizes Alcohol • 1. NAD+ + Ethanol NADH + Acetaldehyde Enzyme: Alcohol Dehydrogenase • 2. NAD+ + Acetaldehyde NADH + Acetic acid Enzyme: AldehydeDehydrogenase • 3. Acetic acid  Water + CO2 Uses ATP ATP  AMP • Disulfiram inhibits AldehydeDehydrogenase • Step 2 is the rate limiting step

  12. More on Metabolism • BAC is measured in grams of alcohol per liter • .08 is the legal limit in New York • An average person can metabolize 8 to 10 milliliters of pure alcohol per hour • More than that, BAC increases • Weight is a big determiner in the concentration of alcohol

  13. Phamacodynamics of Alcohol • Suppresses Calcium-ion Currents • Alterates of cAMP and the Sodium-Pumps • Also effects Glutamate systems (excitatory) and GABA Systems (inhibitory) • Effects Serotonin and Dopamine Systems

  14. Glutamate Receptors • Inhibitor of NMDA-subtype of Glutamate Receptors • Depresses responsiveness of NMDA receptors • Acoamprosate an anti-craving drug to alcohol interacts with NMDA receptors • Glutamate Antagonist

  15. GABA Receptors • Ethanol is a GABA agonist, binds to a subunit of the GABAA receptor • It increases Cl- ions thus hyperpolarizing the cell • Low doses of alcohol can reduce panic and anxiety

  16. Other pharmacodynamic effects • Chronic use of Alcohol changes mRNA of the Neuron • As a result, Ach, DA, opioid and serotnin systems are effected • Abuse potential maybe due to increase in dopamine

  17. Pharmacological Effects • Alcohol effects many different functions of the brain • Alertness, motor functions, and intellectual abilities decrease • Combined with other sedatives (benzodiapines), this increase the sedativeness of alcohol

  18. Pharmacological Effects – Cont. • Alcohol dilates blood vessels, thus releasing more body heat and decreasing blood temp. • Large doses of Alcohol increases the risk of heart failure • Small Doses decrease the risk of coronary disease • Alcohol is a diuretic – it decrease the amount of diuretic hormone thus increasing the excretion of water

  19. Psychological Effects • Low amounts of Alcohol have minimal Change in behavior < .04 BAC • From .04 - .10 BAC, your 4x more likely to get into an accident • .12-.18 Likelihood increases to 25x • .23-.29 your in a stupor • .30 - .33 your in a coma • .39 and greater, your dead

  20. Psychological Effects – Cont. • 50% of all highway crimes and accidents are alcohol related

  21. Health Effects • Alcohol is highly caloric but has little nutritional value • Vitamin and trace element deficiencies are linked to alcohol • Liver and stomach cancers

  22. Tolerance • Metabolic Tolerance – Increase of alcohol digesting enzyme by the liver • Behavioral Tolerance – Brain adapts to amount of drug present. A tolerant person can have a BAC 2x the amount of a nontolerant and act the same • Environmental – the same environment over time when drinking increases tolerance. Changing the environment decrease tolerance

  23. Dependence • Many be do to either increase in dopamine and/or the effect of decreased anxiety • Withdrawal and alcohol seizures may occur in 10% of people who stop taking alcohol • This is due to the neuron producing more glutamate to counteract the effects of increased GABA • When GABA leaves, there is an overabundance of glutamate, thus causing a seizure

  24. Dependence – Cont. • Other effect of withdrawal include hallucinations, psychomotor, agitation, confusion • This syndrome is also known as delirium tremens (DT)

  25. Side effects and Toxicity • Liver damage – 75% of all deaths due to alcoholism are caused by cirrhosis of the liver, the 7th most common cause of death in the US • Other effects are Panreatitis and chronic gastritis causing peptic ulcers

  26. Side effects and Toxicity – Cont. • The metabolizing of alcohol produces free radicals, causing cancer in the liver and some hypothesis breast cancer also • Alcohol has immunosuppressive effects thus promoting tumor growth

  27. Teratogenic Effects • FAS – Fetal Alcohol Syndrome is accountable for 3 to 5 birth defects in 1000 • Causes low intelligence, mental retardation, behavioral abnormalities • There is retard body growth • Facial Abnormailities

  28. Teratogenic Effects – Cont. • Adolescents engage in anti-social behavior • These people are slow learners • Congenital heart defects • The point is – drinking is bad if you are pregnant, do not do it.

  29. Alcoholism & It’s Pharmacological Treatment • 1950s : American Medical Association recognized the syndrome of alcoholism as an “ILLNESS” • Ø1970s : Alcoholism redefined as a “CHRONIC, PROGRESSIVE, AND POTENTIALLY FATAL DISEASE.”

  30. Alcoholism & It’s Pharmacological Treatment – Cont. • 1992: Alcoholism is characterized by impaired control over drinking, preoccupation w/the drug “alcohol”, use of alcohol despite adverse consequences ( impairments in such areas as physical health, psychological functioning, interpersonal functioning, and occupational functioning, as well as legal financial, and spiritual problems) , and distortions in thinking, most notable DENIAL!

  31. Alcoholism & It’s Pharmacological Treatment – Cont. • Denial is nearly always the major obstacle (integral part) • Environmental Factors seem to be less important than Genetic Factors • Alcoholism is used as a “self-medication” of psychological distress.

  32. Alcoholism & It’s Pharmacological Treatment – Cont. • Often times alcoholism is associated with addiction to other drugs, depression, manic-depressive illness, anxiety disorder, or antisocial personality • 30-50% meet criteria for major depression

  33. Alcoholism & It’s Pharmacological Treatment – Cont. • 33% have a coexisting anxiety disorder • many have anti-social personalities • some are schizophrenic • 36% are addicted to other drugs • 14 million Americans have serious alcohol problems. 7 million considered Alcoholics • 100,000 Americans die each year of alcoholism

  34. Pharmacotherapies for Alcoholic Abuse & Dependence: • Eliminating the taking of alcohol is an obvious therapeutic strategy • Vaillant 60 has proven POOR long-term outlook of alcoholism treatment (both pharmacologic or behavioral)

  35. Goals of Pharmacotherapy for Alcohol Dependence & Abuse • Reversal of the severe pharmacological effects of alcohol • Treatment & prevention of withdrawal symptoms & complications • Maintaining abstinence & preventing relapse by : -using agents that decrease craving for alcohol -stop the loss of control over drinking -make it unpleasant to ingest alcohol

  36. Goals of Pharmacotherapy for Alcohol Dependence & Abuse – Cont. • Treatment of coexisting psychiatric disorders that complicate recovery Note: • No agent can reverse the acute pharmacologic effects of alcohol • Pharmacotherapies are available for the treatment & prevention of withdrawal symptoms & complications in alcohol-dependent people who are decreasing or discontinuing alcohol

  37. Pharmacotherapies for Alcohol Withdrawal • Benzodiazepines are the drug of choice for acute alcohol withdrawal • Improve symptoms • Prevent seizures & DTs • Substituting this long-acting drug prevents or suppresses w/drawal symptoms

  38. Pharmacotherapies for Alcohol Withdrawal – Cont. • The “longer-acting” benzodiazepine is either: • 1. Maintained at a level low enough to allow the person to function • 2. Or is withdrawn gradually

  39. Drugs to Help Maintain Abstinence • Alcohol-sensitizing drugs(including: disulfiram & calcium carbimide) : • Used to prevent the patient from drinking by producing an aversive reaction when consuming alcohol • The drug alters the metabolism of alcohol

  40. Drugs to Help Maintain Abstinence – Cont. -Allows acetaldehyde to accumulate which in turncauses acetaldehyde syndrome (characterized by throbbing headache, nausea, vomiting, chest pain ect.)

  41. Drugs to Help Maintain Abstinence – Cont. • Opioid Antagonist including: Naltrexone, Nalmefene, Acamprosate are used in European Countries • Naltrexone: • Used to reduce craving for alcohol • The hypothesis is that the reinforcing properties of alcohol involve the opioid system

  42. Drugs to Help Maintain Abstinence – Cont. - The blockade of the system by use of naltrexone should reduce cravings by reducing the positive reinforcement associated w/ alcohol use

  43. Drugs to Help Maintain Abstinence – Cont. • Dopaminergic drugs: use in maintaining abstinence • Positive reinforcement associated w/ alcohol attractiveness appears to involve the dopaminergic reward system • Withdrawal may be accompanied by hypofunction of this reward system

  44. Drugs to Help Maintain Abstinence – Cont. - Depression is often comorbid (<coexisting) w/ alcohol dependency & some dopaminergic drugs have antidepressant results.

  45. Drugs to Help Maintain Abstinence – Cont. • Serotoninergic Drugs (used to treat alcohol dependence) -Serotonin-specific reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) (e.g. fluoxetine) : used for treating depression & anxiety. - Serotonin 5-HT1a agonist (e.g. buspirone): used for treating anxiety. Effective in treating comorbid anxiety in alcoholics but less effective at reducing alcohol consumption.

  46. Drugs to Help Maintain Abstinence – Cont. • Serotonin 5-HT3 antagonist (e.g. ondansetron) : used for treating nausea.

  47. INHALANTS OF ABUSE • Inhalant abuse is the intentional inhalation of a volatile substance for the purpose of achieving a euphoric state • Consist of chemicals that are volatile at room temperature. Inhaled substances include: Anesthetics (nitrous oxide),Household Solvents (paint thinners),Art & office supplies (markers),Household gas products (propane tanks),Household aerosol propellants (hair spray),Aliphatic nitrites & Organic Solvents (amyl nitrite capsules)

  48. Why are inhalants use and who abuses them • In rate studies, low concentrations of vapor increased motor activity and self-stimulation in the lateral hypothalamus • Increased vapor concentrations suppressed the activation of the brain reward systems & also brought on behavioral depression • Peak inhalant abuse age is 14-15 years old • Some as young as 6-8 years old

  49. Why are inhalants use and who abuses them – Cont. • Often injuries are associated with frequent use but there are instances of “Sudden Sniffing Death Syndrome” that can occur to first time users • 20% of youths have experienced inhalant abuse by the end of 8th grade.

  50. ACUTE INTOXICATION & CHRONIC EFFECTS • Inhaled vapors produce rapid onset of a state of intoxication (similar to alcohol intoxication), sedation with anxiolysis, disinhibition, drowsiness, light-headedness, & euphoria. • Increased intoxication, the user experiences ataxia (staggering), dizziness, delirium, & disorientation.

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