Drug Addiction and the Brain’s Reward System Flashcards
drug
An exogenous substance that, when absorbed into the body of a living organism, alters normal bodily function.
psychoactive drug
Drugs that influence subjective experience and behavior by acting on the nervous system.
Drugs are typically administered in one of four ways:
- Oral Ingestion (e.g. alcohol). Unpredictable: rate depends on presence of foods, etc.
- Injection (e.g. heroin). Used in medical practice because the effects can be large, rapid and predictable. subcutaneously (SC), into the fatty tissue just below the skin, intramuscularly (IM), into the large muscles; or intravenously (IV), directly into the veins at points where they run just beneath the skin, which causes the risk of allergies, impurities in the drugs, damage to veins.
- Inhalation (e.g., tobacco) through the capillaries in the lungs. Dosage is difficult; can be damage to airways and lungs after chronic use.
- Absorption through Mucous Membranes (e.g. cocaine)
Psychoactive Drugs influence the CNS in many ways, including:
- Binding to pre- and postsynaptic receptors.
- Influencing synthesis, transport, release, or deactivation of neurotransmitters.
- Influencing the chain of chemical reactions elicited by the activation of postsynaptic receptors.
Most drugs are deactivated by
enzymes synthesized by the liver.
Drug Metabolism
Process by which liver enzymes convert active drugs to non-active forms. Typically enzymes convert drugs into a more hydrophilic form, preventing the drug from being able to pass through the lipid membranes of cells.
Drug Elimination
Small amounts of some psychoactive drugs are passed out of the body in urine, sweat, feces, breath, and mother’s milk.
Drug Tolerance
State of decreased sensitivity to a drug that develops as a result of exposure to it.
Drug tolerance can be shown in two ways:
- A given dose of a drug has LESS of an effect than that before exposure to it.
- A HIGHER dose of a drug is required to produce the same effect.
Drug Sensitization
A shift of the dose-response curve to the left.
Cross Tolerance
One drug can produce tolerance to other drugs that act by the same mechanisms.
Metabolic Tolerance
Drug tolerance that results from changes that reduce the amount of the drug getting to its sites of action. E.g. liver increases the production of enzymes that metabolize a drug.
Functional Tolerance
Drug tolerance that results from changes that reduce the reactivity of the sites of action to the drug. E.g. reduction in the number of receptors for a drug.
Tolerance to psychoactive drugs is largely
functional. In functional tolerance, there can also be less binding of the drug to receptors, or less effect on the cells.
Withdrawal symptoms
Occurs when significant amounts of a drug that have been in the body for a period of time suddenly decrease. Withdrawal effects are often opposite the initial effects of the dru.
physically dependent
Individuals that suffer withdrawal reactions when they stop taking a drug.
it is thought that tolerance and withdrawal effects are related:
The same mechanism that produces tolerance produces the opposite withdrawal effect.
drug exposure leads to
the development of adaptive neural changes that produce tolerance by counteracting the drug effect.
drug withdrawal:
with no drug to counteract them, the neural adaptations produce withdrawal effects opposite to the effects of the drug.
Contingent Drug Tolerance
Tolerance develops only to drug effects that are actually experienced. If the drug is taken after the effect, not tolerance develops.
Conditioned Drug Tolerance
Tolerance effects are maximally expressed only when a drug is administered in the same situation in which it has previously been administered.
Conditioned withdrawal effect:
tolerance effects are maximally expressed only when a drug is administered in the habitual conditions. being in a room used for drugs, but not having drugs. The compensatory effects would be triggered but since there is no drugs, opposite withdrawal effect would be elicited.
addiction
Habitual drug use despite its adverse effects on health, social life, and despite repeated efforts to stop. Drug addicts are habitual drug users. Not all habitual drug users are addicts.
Is addiction the same thing as physical dependence?
no, drug addicts will renew drug taking even after withdrawal effects have subsided.
physical dependence theory
dependence due to pain of withdrawal. Addicts caught in a cycle of drug taking, withdrawal, drug taking to relieve withdrawal. TREATMENT: gradually withdrawing drug use.