Pharmacology of Reward - French Flashcards
Rate the following methods of drug administration from fastest onset to slowest: IV, insufflation, subcutaneous, inhalation, oral
Inhalation > IV > insufflation = subcutaneous > oral
7 seconds, 15 seconds, 3-5 minutes, 30 minutes, respectively.
A. What properties increase the addictive character of a drug?
B. What pharmacokinetic property makes withdrawals more severe?
A. Rapidity and intensity of onset increase addictive potential.
Shorter half-life increases addictive potential due to more frequent administrations.
So, the intravenous and inhalational routes are associated with the most rapid rise in brain levels of the drug and a greater likelihood to produce addiction. (Eg crack vs cocaine).
B. Withdrawal effects > for short t 1/2. More frequent administrations to avoid effects.
A genetic impairment to nicotine metabolism will have an (increased or decreased) risk for addiction?
For alcohol?
Both will be decreased due to nausea, vomiting, etc.
Increased protection against addiction.
All drugs with significant dependence liability share the pharmacologic property of _____.
enhancing dopamine activity in the nucleus accumbens.
[directly or indirectly through several different neurotransmitter systems and via several different mechanisms.]
What is thought to be the final common pathway of reinforcement and reward?
Mesolimbic pathway.
VTA–> NAc
Stimulation of the VTA by sensory pathways causes release of dopamine in the NAc.
Most drugs of abuse also stimulate this pathway.
Describe the reactive reward system.
What is its purpose?
VTA, NAc, amygdala.
VTA projects to NAc, amygdala projects to both.
Signals the prospect of pleasure/pain, and causes a seeking or avoidance response, respectively.
Describe 3 parts of the reflective reward system and their function.
3 structures that synapse on the NAc.
- Orbitofrontal projections (OFC) –> regulating impulses
- Dorsolateral prefrontal projections (DLPFC) –> situational analysis
- Ventromedial prefrontal (VMPFC) –> impulses
Without the reflective reward system input, what happens?
The reactive system takes over (eg initiation of drug-seeking behavior).
Opioids:
Give action/location.
Agonists at μ-opioid receptors [Gi]
CNS Depressants:
Give action/location.
Enhance GABA and/or inhibit glutamate fxn
CNS Stimulants:
Give action/location.
Block DA reuptake or enhance DA release
Nicotine:
Give action/location.
Agonist at nicotinic neuronal receptors
Hallucinogens:
Give action/location.
Partial agonist at 5HT2 receptors (DA releaser)
Dissociative Anesthetics:
Give action/location.
Antagonist at NMDA-Glu receptors
Cannabinoids:
Give action/location.
Agonist at cannabinoid (CB1-CB2) receptors