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Drugs and Behaviour

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anesthesia. e.g. PCP ( angel dust'), ketamine, nitrous oxide, muscimol ... Analgesia, anaesthesia, confusion, excitement, intoxication, impaired communication ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Drugs and Behaviour


1
Drugs and Behaviour
  • Dr Claire Gibson (cg95_at_le.ac.uk)
  • School of Psychology

2
Overview
  • Definitions
  • Routes of administration
  • Drug effectiveness dose response, therapeutic
    index, tolerance
  • What is a placebo?
  • How do drugs act?
  • Behavioural effects and mechanism(s) of action
  • Cannabis
  • Monoamine-related drugs
  • Dissociative anaesthetics

3
Definitions
  • Drug
  • Psychopharmacology
  • Drugs have effects and sites of action

4
Pharmacokinetics
  • Absorption
  • Distribution
  • Metabolism
  • Excretion

5
Administration
  • Route of administration determines (in part)
    amount of drug that reaches the brain and the
    speed at which it starts to act

6
Routes of administration
7
Routes of administration
  • Ingestion
  • Tablets, capsules, syrups,
  • Depends on absorption by gut
  • Inhalation
  • Smoking, nasal absorption
  • Takes advantage of rich blood supply of nose and
    lungs
  • Peripheral injection
  • Subcutaneous, intramuscular, intravenous
  • Central injection
  • Epidural, intracerebroventricular (icv)

8
Absorption
  • Absorption
  • Dependent upon various factors
  • including drug solubility, gastrointestinal
    motility and pH

Bioavailability
9
Absorption
Plasma cocaine concentration (mg/ml)
10
Distribution
  • Must enter blood stream
  • Gastrointestinal motility, pH
  • Blood flow
  • Diffusibility
  • Solubility
  • To get to brain must pass through blood-brain
    barrier (BBB)

11
Blood-brain barrier (BBB)
12
Metabolism and excretion
  • Metabolism
  • The liver
  • First-pass metabolism
  • Excretion
  • The kidneys
  • Drug testing

13
Drug effectiveness
high
Dose response curve
Effect of drug
low
low
Dose of drug
high
14
Drug effectiveness
Dose-response curve for the analgesic effect of
morphine
high
Dose-response curve for the depressive effect of
morphine on respiration
Margin of safety
Effect of drug
low
low
Dose of drug
high
15
  • Repeated administration
  • Tolerance
  • Sensitization
  • Placebo
  • Innocuous
  • Any effect?

16
How drugs act
Precursor
Enzyme
Neurotransmitter (NT)
17
How drugs act
  • Drug serves as a precursor
  • Drug inactivates synthetic enzyme
  • Drug prevents storage of NT
  • Drug stimulates release of NT
  • Drug inhibits release of NT
  • Drug stimulates postsynaptic receptors
  • Drug blocks postsynaptic receptors
  • Drug inhibits synthesis/release of NT
  • Drug increases synthesis/release of NT
  • Drug blocks reuptake
  • Drug inactivates acetycholinesterase
  • Agonist
  • Antagonist

Precursor
Enzyme
Neurotransmitter (NT)
18
Drugs and receptors
  • Direct agonist/antagonist
  • Indirect agonist/antagonist

19
Mind-altering drugs of abuse
  • Classification difficult
  • Dose important
  • Psychotomimetic psychosis-mimicking
  • Psychotogenic psychosis-generating
  • Hallucinogenic
  • Neurotransmitter mimics

20
Mind-altering drugs of abuse
  • True hallucinogens produce their effects without
    causing changes in the level of consciousness
  • Share an ability to profoundly alter mood state
    and perceptual-motor functioning
  • NOT common mechanism

21
Hallucinogens
  • Term is mis-leading?
  • Psychedelics
  • Dissociatives
  • Deliriants

22
Psychedelics
  • mind expanding
  • Enhance/amplify thought processes of brain
  • E.g. LSD (acid), MDMA (ecstasy), magic
    mushrooms, cannabis
  • High levels dissociative state

23
Dissociatives
  • Reduce or block signals to the conscious mind
  • anesthesia
  • e.g. PCP (angel dust), ketamine, nitrous oxide,
    muscimol
  • Also act as CNS depressants
  • death

24
Deliriants
  • Acetylcholine receptor antagonists
  • true hallucinogens
  • Plants such as deadly nightshade, mandrake,
    henbane, and datura, high doses of pharmaceutical
    drugs
  • Side effects
  • toxic

25
Mind-altering drugs of abuse
  • Cannabis
  • Monoamine-related drugs
  • Dissociative anaesthetics

26
Cannabis
  • Natural substance derived from hemp plant,
    Cannabis sativa
  • Reported use as recreational drug for over 4000
    years
  • However, since 4th century BC also employed as a
    therapeutic drug
  • Today most commonly used street drug world wide

27
Cannabinoids
  • Cannabis plant contains over 60 compounds
  • Cannabinoids
  • Marijuana
  • Hashish
  • Active component
  • delta-9 tetrahydrocannibinol (THC)
  • street potency of cannabis i.e. THC content
  • 1974 0.35
  • 1990 3.54

28
Effects of cannabis
  • 1 initial period of euphoria and relaxation
    followed by depressant period.
  • Euphoria, altered time perception, dissociation
    of ideas, paranoia, motor impairments and
    occasional hallucinations.
  • Alterations in various cognitive and behavioural
    abilities

29
Biological effects of cannabis
  • Cannabinoid (CB) receptors CB1 and CB2
  • Widespread distribution
  • Highest in cerebral cortex, hippocampus,
    hypothalamus and amygdala
  • Endogenous cannabinoids?

30
Endocannabinoids
  • Endogenous cannabinoids endocannabinoids
  • i.e. anandamide, 2-arachidonoyl-glycerol, noladin
    ether
  • Act at presynaptic CB receptors and decrease
    release of transmitters
  • Physiological effects poorly understood

31
Cannabis therapeutic uses
  • Treatment of nausea and vomiting
  • Appetite stimulation
  • Analgesia
  • Anticonvulsants

32
Cannabis use and psychosis
  • Theories
  • Cannabis use cannabis psychosis
  • May precipitate an episode of schizophrenia
  • May exacerbate symptoms of schizophrenia
  • Cannabis is harmless

33
Monoamine-related drugs
  • Similar molecular structure to monoamine
    neurotransmitters
  • e.g. MDMA, LCD

34
MDMA
  • 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine
  • Ecstasy
  • Amphetamine analogue
  • Hallucinogen not stimulant
  • ve effects (love drug)
  • euphoria, tingling, increased sociability
  • -ve effects
  • neuronal damage, fatigue, insomnia, sweating,
    blurred vision, loss of motor coordination,
    anxiety, dehydration, psychosis

35
Actions of MDMA
  • Stimulate 5-HT release
  • Increase synaptic concn. of dopamine
  • Neurotoxic reaction
  • Even limited use of MDMA may cause permanent
    neuronal damage to 5-HT neurones

36
LSD
  • Synthetic drug, related to a number of compounds
    in ergot fungus
  • First synthesised in 1940s
  • Very potent

37
LSD
  • ve effects
  • Alterations in hearing and vision
  • Hallucinations
  • Subjective sense of time prolongation
  • -ve effects
  • bad trip
  • Dysphoria
  • Anxiety
  • Depression
  • Flashbacks
  • Tolerance develops quickly

38
Actions of LSD
  • Affects 5-HT function
  • May affect glutamate transmission
  • May increase dopamine transmission

39
Dissociative anaesthetics
  • Induce profound anaesthesia
  • e.g. Phencyclidine (PCP), ketamine
  • PCP
  • Synthesised in 1950s
  • Ketamine
  • date rape drug

40
PCP
  • angel dust
  • Smoked, swallowed, sniffed or injected
  • Low level of abuse
  • Dose-dependent effects

41
PCP - effects
  • Dose
  • Low
  • Moderate
  • High
  • Effects
  • drunken state or floaty euphoria, distorted
    body image
  • Analgesia, anaesthesia, confusion, excitement,
    intoxication, impaired communication
  • Definite psychosis, convulsions

42
PCP mechanism of action
  • Novel PCP binding site found
  • High densities in hippocampus and motor cortex
  • Discovered PCP binding site within NMDA receptor
    channel
  • PCP NMDA receptor antagonist
  • Also
  • dopamine agonist in nucleus accumbens, prefrontal
    cortex and basal ganglia
  • enhances 5-HT activity
  • blocks muscarinic and nicotinic acetylcholine
    receptors

43
PCP and psychosis
  • PCP exacerbates symptoms of psychotic patients
  • Heavy PCP users report schizophrenia- like
    psychotic episodes
  • Part of evidence for glutamatergic involvement in
    schizophrenia

44
Hallucinogens and risks
  • Not necessarily addictive (still damaging)
  • Social addiction
  • e.g. Cannabis, Ecstasy
  • Some psychological addiction if experience
    pleasant
  • e.g. LSD, Magic mushrooms

45
Study guide
  • How does a drug reach its target?
  • How does the blood-brain barrier limit the access
    of drugs to the brain?
  • How do drugs effect synaptic transmission? Give
    examples.
  • Which are the hallucinogenic drugs?
  • What behavioural changes do they induce?
  • What neurotransmitter systems underlie their
    activity?
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