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Last Week of the Quarter

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Last Week of the Quarter Collect Homework Week Overview Double Check Grades All Makeup Work Due Tomorrow Midterm Friday One Last Extra Credit Today: Marijuana: Page 13 – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Last Week of the Quarter


1
Last Week of the Quarter
  • Collect Homework
  • Week Overview
  • Double Check Grades
  • All Makeup Work Due Tomorrow
  • Midterm Friday
  • One Last Extra Credit
  • Today Marijuana Page 13

2
Tobacco Review
  • Top 5 Leading COD
  • 3 Long / 3 Short Term Effects
  • COPD
  • Chemicals in Tobacco Smoke
  • 3/5 Advertising Techniques
  • 2/3 Quick Facts that Count
  • 1 Pack/2 Packs Day______
  • 3 Things Youd Do w/

3
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4
Marijuana
5
The Least You Need to Know
  • Marijuana
  • Psychoactive Chemical
  • Chemicals (Carcinogens?)
  • Long Term vs. Short Term Effects
  • Legal/DUI Potential
  • Addictive Potential
  • Gateway Drug

6
What is Marijuana?
  • Marijuana is a green, brown, or gray mixture
    of dried, shredded leaves, stems, seeds, and
    flowers of the hemp plant.
  • You may hear marijuana called by street names
    such as pot,
  • herb,
  • weed,
  • grass,
  • More than 200 slang terms
  • Psychoactive Chemical THC (3-4000 Chemicals)

7
Marijuana Has Changed Drastically
  • ?9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC)
  • Used to smoke the leaves now smoking the bud,
    which is only produced by the female plant and
    have a higher THC content than the leaves
  • 60s 70s 0.5-3 THC
  • High lasted 45 minutes
  • Noticable skewed emotional reactions
  • Got the munchies
  • Today 6-20 THC
  • High lasts 3-6 hours
  • Eye-hand coordination affected
  • Sense of speed, distance, time

8
Is Marijuana a Gateway Drug?
9
Is Marijuana Addicting I?
  • Yes
  • Is everyone addicted.No
  • When is someone dependent or addicted to the
    drug?
  • Latest treatment data indicate that, in 2002,
    marijuana was the primary drug of abuse in about
    15 percent (289,532) of all admissions to
    treatment facilities in the United States.

10
Is Marijuana Addicting II?
  • Addiction
  • uncontrollable,
  • compulsive drug seeking and use,
  • even in the face of negative health and social
    consequences.
  • This is the crux of how many professional
    organizations all define addiction
  • Physiological vs. Psychological?

11
Facts That Count
  • Marijuana use also has the potential to promote
    cancer of the lungs and other parts of the
    respiratory tract because it contains irritants
    and carcinogens.
  • In fact, marijuana smoke contains 50 to 70
    percent more carcinogenic hydrocarbons than does
    tobacco smoke
  • THC impairs the immune systems ability to fight
    off infectious diseases and cancer
  • Depression(19), anxiety(20), and personality
    disturbances(21) have been associated with
    marijuana use
  • In 2002, marijuana was the third most commonly
    abused drug mentioned in drug-related hospital
    emergency department (ED) visits in the
    continental United States

12
  • Higher burn temperature,
  • Inhaled more deeply
  • Held in the lungs longer than
    cigarettes
  • No filter
  • 50-70 More Hydrocarbons

13
Effects on the Lungs..
  • Someone who smokes marijuana regularly may have
    many of the same respiratory problems that
    tobacco smokers have.
  • daily cough and phlegm,
  • symptoms of chronic bronchitis,
  • and more frequent chest colds.
  • Continuing to smoke marijuana can lead to
    abnormal functioning of lung tissue injured or
    destroyed by marijuana smoke.
  • amount of tar inhaled by marijuana smokers and
    the level of carbon monoxide absorbed are three
    to five times greater than among tobacco smokers.
  • inhaling more deeply and holding the smoke in the
    lungs.

14
Marijuana's Effects on the Brain
  • Cerebellum--Body movement coordination
  • Hippocampus--Learning and memory
  • Cerebral cortex, especially cingulate, frontal,
    and parietal regions--Higher cognitive functions
  • Nucleus accumbens Reward
  • Basal ganglia--Movement control

15
Drugs and driving may be a bigger problem than
generally recognized. A New England Journal of
Medicine report on drivers without alcohol in
their systems who were stopped by police for
reckless driving found that 45 had marijuana and
25 had cocaine in their systems.
https//www.dupagecase.com/Clerk/allsearch.do
  • The images are of various pupil sizes. A 6mm,
    7mm, or 8mm pupil size could indicate that a
    person is under the influence of cocaine, crack,
    meth., hallucinogens, crystal, ecstasy, or other
    stimulant. A 1mm or 2mm pupil size could indicate
    a person under the influence of heroin, opiates,
    or other depressant, (see more examples below).

16
Effects on the Heart
  • One study has indicated that a users risk of
    heart attack more than quadruples in the first
    hour after smoking marijuana.
  • The researchers suggest that such an effect might
    occur from marijuanas effects on blood pressure
    and heart rate and reduced oxygen-carrying
    capacity of blood.

Bachs L, Morland H. Acute cardiovascular
fatalities following cannabis use. Forensic Sci
Int 2001 124 200-203CrossRefMedline.
Mittleman MA, Lewis RA, Maclure M, Sherwood JB,
Muller JE. Triggering myocardial infarction by
marijuana. Circulation 2001 103
2805-2809Abstract/Free Full Text.
17
Amotivational Syndrome
  • said to be diminished inspiration to participate
    in normal social situations and activities, with
    lapses in apathy caused by an external event,
    situation, substance, relationship, or other
    cause.
  • Otherwise put..

18
Marijuana Recent Developments
  • Decriminalization in Canada
  • Different than Legalization
  • No prosecution for small amounts
  • Medicinal Marijuana
  • Raich v. Ashcroft
  • State Vs. Federal Government
  • Local Control

19
Controversial Issue Extra Credit1.Three Reasons
For 2. Three Against 3. Paragraph Reaction
  • Should Pregnant Users Be Prosecuted?
  • Should Steroids Be Legal?
  • Should Marijuana be Legal for Medicinal
    Purposes?
  • Should Needle Exchange Programs be Supported?
  • Is Prozac Over-prescribed?
  • Is DARE Effective?
  • Are Anti-media Campaigns Effective?
  • Should Drugs Be Legalized?

20
Effects of Tobacco/Marijuana
Tobacco Both
Marijuana --problems with memory
Change in Brain chemistry --Lung
Damage and learning --distorted perception

Lower Testosterone/Sperm Count --difficulty in
thinking and problem solving --loss of
coordination --and increased heart rate.
21
MarijuanaShort Term vs.
Long Term Effects
  • HR and pulse rate
  • Cardiac arrhythmia
  • Difficulty in breathing
  • Panic attacks / Anxiety
  • Dry throat, mouth, lips
  • Drowsiness/Sleepiness
  • Bloodshot eyes
  • Hallucination /Paranoia
  • Decrease in memory, reflexes and coordination
  • Alters perception on time
  • Increased hunger (munchies)
  • Addiction?
  • Anxiety
  • Amotivational Syndrome
  • Burnout
  • Risk of Lung Cancer, Bronchitis, and Emphysema
  • Memory Loss
  • Damage to Immune System
  • Infertility
  • Heart and lung damage
  • Hormonal imbalances
  • Low blood pressure

22
Did You Know
  • Americans drink the equivalent of 500 million
    gallons of pure alcohol each year. (Statistic
    from Prevention's Giant Book of Health Facts,
    1991.)
  • Alcohol consumption by college students is linked
    to at least 1,400 student deaths and 500,000
    unintentional injuries each year. (Statistic from
    the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and
    Addiction, Alcohol Alert, 581-4, 2002.)
  • In 2002, 17,419 people in the United States died
    in alcohol-related motor vehicle crashes,
    accounting for 41 of all traffic-related deaths
    (NHTSA, 2003).

23
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24
Did You Know Cont
  • In 1997, about 40 of all crimes (violent and
    non-violent) were committed under the influence
    of alcohol (Bureau of Justice Statistics,
    1998). 
  • In 1997, 40 of convicted rape and sexual assault
    offenders said that they were drinking at the
    time of their crime (Greenfield, 2000).
  • People who abuse alcohol are more likely to
    engage in risky behaviors, such as having
    unprotected sex, having more sex partners, and
    using intravenous drugs. In a single act of
    unprotected sex with an infected partner, a
    teenage woman has a 1 risk of acquiring HIV, a
    30 risk of getting genital herpes, and a 50
    chance of contracting gonorrhea (Alan Guttmacher
    Institute, 1994).
  • According to the U.S. Department of Health
    Human Services, 82 percent of 12-17 year-olds do
    not drink. (2004 National Survey on Drug Use and
    Health).

25
Alcohol
26
Alcohol
27
Path of Alcohol
28
THE EFFECTS OF ALCOHOL and THE ADOLESCENT BRAIN
  • Brain- first area depressed speech, thought,
    restraint, judgment, inhibition
  • Then, spinal cord reflexes and respiration
    which can be fatal.
  • black-outs may occur (periods of time that
    cant be remembered when sober)
  • disturbed sleep patterns, change in REM sleep

29
Adolescent Brain Changes
prefrontal cortex
  • These brain changes are relevant to adolescent
    behavior
  • Prefrontal cortex (PFC) is pruned not fully
    developed until mid-20s
  • Amygdala (and n.a.) show less pruning and tend to
    dominate the PFC

amygdala
nucleus accumbens
judgment
reward system
30
This imbalance leads to... ? planned thinking
? impulsiveness ? self-control ?
risk-takingmore hot talking, less cool
talking
I like to use drugs!!
PFC
amygdala
31
Effects on Body Continued
  • Cardiovascular- dilates blood vessels which
    causes loss of heat
  • initially increases heart rate, then slows
    it down
  • Gastrointestinal- toxic effect on stomach
    lining
  • irritates ulcers
  • increases acid and pepsin secretions
    (digestive fluid)
  • nauseant
  • Sexual Stimulation- too much alcohol abolishes
    sexual function
  • Liver- (blood volume circulates through liver
    every 4 minutes)
  • cells in liver destroyed
  • scarring, also called Cirrhosis fatty
    liver
  • can cause death long term

32
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33
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34
Blood Alcohol Concentration
  • Blood Alcohol Concentration measured in
    percentages
  • .10 means 10ml of alcohol per 100mL of blood
  • maximum BAC is reached within 20-30 minutes
  • Process of filtering blood is called Oxidation
  • Occurs in Liver and removes about 1 drink per hour

35
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36
Effects of Alcohol Chart
  • Factors Influencing Absorption
  • Amount/Size of Drinks
  • Food
  • Body Size
  • Drug Interaction (s)?
  • Gender
  • Gender differences women tend to be more
    affected by alcohol than men (lt of alcohol
    metabolizing enzyme)

37
Alcohol Poisoning
  • Can happen in one episode of binge drinking
  • can be fatal
  • choke on own vomit or
  • midbrain shuts down which regulates breathing
  • Call 911 if you notice
  • vomiting, seizures, stupor, coma, cant awaken,
    pale skin
  • once a person passes out, their BAC continues
    to rise

38
Standard Drinks
  • A standard drink contains approximately 10 grams
    of alcohol. This is equivalent to
  • 1 bottle, 4 - 6
  • 1 small glass of wine, 10 - 14
  • 1 shot 30mL , (hard liquor), 37 - 43

39
Absorption and Metabolism
  • Absorption and metabolism of alcohol
  • rapid absorption
  • stomach absorbs ¼
  • rest is absorbed in small intestine
  • liver breaks down alcohol in about 1 drink
    an hour
  • Amounts of alcohol (2/3 ounce of pure ethanol)
  • Same for all below!!
  • shot of hard liquor (86 proof/ 43 alcohol)
  • wine- 5 ounces (12 alcohol)
  • can of beer 12 ounces (4.5 alcohol)

40
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41
  • What are the Legal Limits?
  • You
  • gt Age 21
  • 1 Drink .02

42
Drunk Goggles Demonstration
  • Movie clip

43
Generalization
  • Bill (who is 55, has a good job, graduated and
    drinks in moderation.) has 4 beers over the
    course of 2 hours what is his BAC

44
Use a designated driver, or one will be appointed
for you !
  • Nearly ½ of all TRAFFIC FATALITITES are related
    to DUI.
  • DUI
  • Estimated Cost ________
  • 2 year revocation license
  • Zero Tolerance
  • 3 Month/6 Month Suspension

45
Implied Consent
  • Through the process of obtaining a drivers
    license a person in Illinois one gives consent to
    chemical testing. If a police officer has a
    reasonable belief that person is driving under
    the influence of alcohol or drugs, the officer
    can request the person to submit to testing.
  • Blood 2. Breath 3. Urine

46
Sobering Myths
  • Exercise. Showering Drinking Coffee.

47
Only TIME will sober you up
48
Factors Contributing Toward Alcoholism
  • Genetics 2-7 Chance
  • Drinking lt 15
  • 4 X Chance
  • High Tolerance
  • Levels

49
Fetal Alcohol Syndrome
  • A national survey found that more than half of
    women age 15-44 drank while pregnant.
  • FAS is the leading known preventable cause of
    mental retardation and birth defects
  • FAS is not just a childhood disorder exposure to
    alcohol as a fetus can cause a wide range of
    lifelong physical and mental disabilities.

50
Alcohol Essential Questions
  • Short term vs. Long term effects
  • Can you identify a standard drink
  • What is B A C
    ?
  • Legal Limit for.YOU ADULTS
  • If BAC is .12 what of blood is alcohol?
  • What is oxidation? Organ responsible? Oxidize 1
    drink every
  • Sobering Myths
  • Factors influencing absorption
  • 1 Cause of Mental retardation in the U.S. is
    ______________ (also called . . . )
  • Factors contributing to alcoholism.
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