Psychopharmacology Flashcards
What is the definition of psychopharmacology?
Study of the effect of drugs on the nervous system and behaviour, is also a tool to study the mechanisms by which the brain controls psychological function
What is the definition of an agonist and an antagonist?
agonist - facilitates the effects of a neurotransmitter
antagonist - inhibits the effects of a neurotransmitter
Some drugs can be either depending on the dosage
What are the most common types of neurotransmitter in the brain?
Glutamate (excitatory)
GABA (inhibitory)
Can have neuromodulatory effect
What are the 4 types of glutamate receptor?
- NMDA
- Kainate
- AMPA
- Metabotropic glutamate receptors
What are the 2 types of GABA receptors?
- GABA(a) ionotropic
2. GABA(b) matabotropic
What are the two types of receptors for Ach (acetylecholine)?
Nicotinic - ionotropic (also found in muscles)
Muscarinic - metabotropic (cholinergic only found in the brain)
What are the 3 main systems that use acetylcholine as a neurotransmitter?
- Dorsolateral pons - projects to the thalamus and is associated with sleep & learning
- Basal forebrain - Projects to a large area and is associated with learning and attention, degrades in Alzheimer’s
- Medial septum - Major cholinergic input to the hippocampus and is also associated with learning and memory
What neurotransmitters and receptors does the dopamine system use?
Neurotransmitters - Catecholamine and noradrenaline
5 receptors, most of which metabotropic
What are the 3 main dopaminergic regions of the brain?
- Nigrostriatal - controls action selection and movement
- Mesolimbic - associated with reward or secondary reinforcer
- Mesocortical - short term memory
What neurotransmitters and receptors does the noradrenergic system use?
4 receptors (alpha 1/2, beta 1/2) all metabotropic uses catecholamine
Where does the noradrenergic system originate and what is it associated with?
In the locus coreulus - associated with vigilance and attentiveness
What neurotransmitter is used by the serotinergic system and what receptors does it use?
Indolamine
9 receptor types that are mostly metabotropic
Where does the serotinergic system originate and what is it associated with?
Ralphe nuclei - associated with regulation of mood, eating, sleep and pain
What is neuromodulation?
The effect by which activation of a small area of the brain can have large impacts on the rest of the brain