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THE PHARMACOLOGY AND PHYSIOLOGY OF DRUGS Goldberg Chapter 5 SOC 204 Drugs & Society

Soc 204 goldberg ch 5.1

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Page 1: Soc 204 goldberg ch 5.1

THE PHARMACOLOGY AND PHYSIOLOGY OF DRUGSGoldberg Chapter 5SOC 204 Drugs & Society

Page 2: Soc 204 goldberg ch 5.1

Attendance: 4/22How is your brain?A. Ready to goB. Ready for the

weekend modeC. Why do you ask?

Ready to

go

Ready fo

r the w

eeke

nd mode

Why d

o you ask?

33% 33%33%

Response

Page 3: Soc 204 goldberg ch 5.1

Pharmacology

• Different drugs produce different effects within the psyche and soma

• The interaction between drugs and living organisms is called pharmacology

• Drug pharmacology relates to the way it is administered, absorbed, distributed, metabolized, and excreted

• Drugs that act quickly and produce intense effects are more likely to be abused than are drugs that act slowly

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Drug Actions

• Drugs affect various organs, including the nervous system.

• The nervous system consists of the central nervous system (CNS), the autonomic nervous system (ANS), and the peripheral nervous system (PNS)

• The CNS consists of the brain and spinal cord, and is composed of nerve cells (neurons)

• Information is transmitted electrically within the neuron, and chemically between neurons

Page 5: Soc 204 goldberg ch 5.1

Nervous System

• Homeostasis• Neurons• Glial Cells

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You have approximately 100 billion neurons and 100 trillion synapses in your brain. How long would it take to count to a trillion?

A. All dayB. A monthC. A trillion secondsD. 32,000 years All d

ay

A month

A trilli

on seco

nds

32,000 years

0% 0%0%0%

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Nervous System

• Somatic Nervous System• Sensory Information

• Autonomic Nervous System• Sympathetic Branch –

Fight/Flight/Freeze• Parasympathetic Branch –

regulate body functions

• Central Nervous System• Brain & Spinal Cord

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The Brain

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Your neurotransmitter

• What it does• What happens if you have too much?• What happens if you have too little?

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Chemical Pathways

1. Dopamine (excitatory)• Found in basal ganglia and

other regions – behavior & emotions, including pleasure

• Nigrostriatal dopamine pathway• Related to muscle rigidity

• Mesolimbic dopamine pathway• Related to psychotic behavior• Possible component of the

“reward” properties of drugs

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Chemical Pathways

2. Acetylcholine (excitatory)• Found in the cerebral cortex & basal ganglia• Involved in Alzheimer’s disease, learning, memory

storage, movement3. Norepinephrine (excitatory & inhibitory)• Regulates level of arousal and attentiveness, memory• May play a role in initiation of food intake (appetite)

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Chemical Pathways

4. Serotonin (inhibitory or excitatory)• Found in the brain stem raphe nuclei• May have a role in impulsivity, aggression, depression,

control of food, and alcohol intake• Hallucinogenic drugs influence serotonin pathways5. GABA (Gamma-amino butyric acid) (inhibitory)• Found in most regions of the brain• Inhibitory neurotransmitter, sleep, anxiety

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Chemical Pathways

6. Glutamate (excitatory)• Found in most regions of the brain• Excitatory neurotransmitter, involved in long-term

memory7. Endorphins (inhibitory)• Opioid-like chemical occurring naturally in the brain• Play a role in pain relief

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People who engage in strenuous exercise actually emit a neurotransmitter that contributes to a “high” feeling.

A. TrueB. False

TrueFa

lse

0%0%

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The neurotransmitter responsible for control of alertness and the fight-or-flight response is:

A. GABAB. DopamineC. SerotoninD. Norepinephrine

GABA

Dopamine

Serotonin

Norepinephrine

0% 0%0%0%

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This neurotransmitter is the brain’s major inhibitory neurotransmitter

A. SerotoninB. GABAC. EndorphinsD. Acetylcholine

SerotoninGABA

Endorphins

Acetylcholin

e

0% 0%0%0%

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This neurotransmitter has a huge influence on moodA. EndorphinsB. GlutamateC. SerotoninD. Acetylcholine

Endorphins

Glutamate

Serotonin

Acetylcholin

e

0% 0%0%0%

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This neurotransmitter is responsible for feelings of pleasure/reward.A. GlutamateB. SerotoninC. DopamineD. GABA

Glutamate

Serotonin

DopamineGABA

0% 0%

96%

4%

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Drug Actions

• Alter neurotransmitter availability• Agonists - Mimic neurotransmitters• Antagonists = Occupy neurotransmitter and prevent

its activation• Interference with reuptake• Video: https://

www.youtube.com/watch?v=uXREQnFGHGA

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Classifications

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One’s mood while taking a psychoactive drug will affect the experience derived from the drug.A. TrueB. False

TrueFa

lse

0%

100%

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Drug Effects

• Nonspecific effects • SET• SETTING

• Specific effects

• Placebo effects

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Double-blind procedure

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Dose-Response

• Dose-response relationship = correlation between the response and the quantity of drug administered

• Threshold = the dose at which an effect is first observed

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Dose

• Effective dose = the dose of a drug that produces a meaningful effect in some percentage of test subjects• ED50 refers to the effective dose for half the animal

subjects in a drug test• Lethal dose = the dose of a drug that has a lethal

effect in some percentage of test subjects• LD50 refers to the lethal dose for half the animal subjects in

a drug test • Therapeutic index = LD50/ED50

• Always greater than one

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If a drug has a lethal dose that is close to its effective dose, that drug is more dangerous than if the LD is far from the ED.

A. TrueB. False

TrueFa

lse

21%

79%

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Dose

• Potency = measured by the amount of a drug required to produce a given effect

• Toxicity = capacity of a drug to do damage or cause adverse side effects

• Safety margin = difference between: • Dose that produces the desired therapeutic effect in most

patients• Lowest dose that produces an unacceptable toxic reaction

• Most drugs have an LD1 well above the ED95

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Routes of Administration

Forms and methods

of taking drugs

oral ingestion

inhalation

injection

topical application

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Distribution

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Tolerance

• Pharmacological• Behavioral• Cross-tolerance• Reverse tolerance

Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8-Qtd6RhfVA