Term
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Definition
Any natural or synthesized product that has psychoactive effects-it changes perceptions, thoughts, emotions, and behaviors |
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Term
Alcohol use in different countries |
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Definition
Middle East: prohibited by Islamic law, severe penalties
India: Not illegal, but violates social norms
US: socal attitudes and legal structue encourage and punishes use |
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Term
Biggest age group that uses illegal substnaces |
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Definition
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Term
Race and use of illicit drugs
(metropolitan areas) |
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Definition
White: 12%
Black: 11.2%
Hispanic:10.1%
Asian: 5.1% |
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Term
Possession of cannabis in Indiana
Penalties |
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Definition
30 grams:1 year/$5,000
>30 grams: 3 years/$10,000
(30 g= 1oz) |
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Term
Sale or cultivation of cannabis in Indiana
Penalties |
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Definition
30 grams: 1 year/$5,000
30 grams to 10 lbs: 3 years/$10,000
>10 lbs: 8 years/10,000 |
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Term
Federal Prisoners by offence |
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Definition
Drugs highest- almost 80,000 |
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Term
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Definition
Experience of significant maladaptive behavioral and psychological spymptoms due to the effect of a substance on the CNS |
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Term
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Definition
Experience of clinical significant distress in social, occupational, or other areas of functioning due to the cessation or reduction of substance use |
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Term
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Definition
Diagnosis given when recurrent substance use leads to significant harmful consequences |
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Term
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Definition
Diagnosis given when substance use leads to physiological dependence or significant impairment or distress |
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Term
Criteria for Substance Abuse |
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Definition
*One or more during a year leading to significant impairment or distress
1. Failure to fulfill important obligations at work, home, or school as a result of substance abuse
2. Repeated use of substance in psychically hazardous situations
3. Continued use of substance despite repeated social or legal problenms as a result of use
4. Continued use of substance despite problems |
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Term
Criteria for substance dependence |
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Definition
*Maladaptive pattern of substance use, leading to 3 or more of the following:
1. Tolerance(the need for increased amounts of substance to acheice intoxication, diminished effect with continued use of same amount)
2. Withdrawal(the characteristic withdrawal syndrome; same substance taken to releive or aviod withdrawal symptoms
3. Substance often taken in larger amounts or over a longer period than intended
4. No desire or unsuccessful attempts to control use
5. Consumes a lot of time
6. Failure to meet demands of daily living
7. Use continued despite appreciation of problem |
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Term
Addictive drugs impact on the brain |
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Definition
act on the Ventral Tegmental Area and Nucleus Accumbens-components of the reward circuit
-interconnected with prefrontal cortex, septum, amygdala, nucleus accumbens |
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Term
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Definition
In the brainstem, sends dopaminergic projections to the nucleus accumbens |
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Term
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Definition
-Drugs of abuse act on receptors within the reward circuit
-Ecstasy-> Serotonin
-Cocaine-> Dopamine
-Heroin-> Enkephalins
-Barbituates-> GABA |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
Psychostimulants (Cocaine, Amphetamine) stimulate? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
Prevalence rates of substance use in USA- past month use |
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Definition
Alcohol:50%
Cigarettes: 30%
Marijuana: 6%
Sadatives/Opiates: 3%
Cocaine: 1%
Hallucinogens: .4%
Inhalents: .2% |
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Term
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Definition
Increase GABAergic transmission
-Benzodiazepines and Barbituates
-Opiates
-Inhalents
-Alcohol |
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Term
Benzodiazepines and Barbituates |
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Definition
-Usually GABA agonists:primary inhibitor neurotransmitter in the cortex
-low doses:relaxation, feeling of well-being
-high doses: alcohol like- loss of coordination, problems concentrting/working, redued inhibition, poor judgement |
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Term
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Definition
Valium, Xanax, Halcion, Librium, Klopin
-anti-anxiety, anti-seizure meds |
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Term
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Definition
(Quaaludes)
-Initially prescribed as sleeping aid, highly addictive
-Overdose: diaphragm relaxes, causing death suffocation |
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Term
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Definition
Morphine-(pain releiver in 17th century)
Heroin
Codeine
Hydrocone (Vicodin)
Oxycodone (Oxycontin)
Methadone
Opiods criminalized in US in 1917 |
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Term
Opioiod Intoxication Symptoms |
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Definition
Euphoria followed by dysphoria, nausea/vomiting, muscle aches, tearing or nasal mucus discharge, dilation of pupils, goose bumps, sweating, diarrhea, yawning, fever, insomnia |
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Term
Opioid Withdrawal Symptoms |
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Definition
Marked fatigue or drowsiness, marked anxiety or depression, nausea or vomiting |
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Term
Mu Opiate receptors-PET scan |
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Definition
Concentrated in the thalamus-involved in pain, the cerebral cortex, the visual cortex, and the basal ganglia-coordinates movement and emotion
-Number of receptors varies among individuals
-Higher numbers of Mu receptors associated with decreased pain sensitivity |
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Term
Short term effects of heroin use |
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Definition
-rush
-depressed respiration
clouded mental functioning
-nausea and vomiting
-suppression of pain
-spontaneous aborition |
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Term
Long term effects of heroin abuse |
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Definition
-Addiction
-Infectious diseases (HIV/AIDS, Hep)
-Collapsed Veins
-Bacterial infections
-Absecces
-Infection of heart lining and valves
-Arthritis and other rheumatologic problems |
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Term
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Definition
Two pathways to addiction: medical or after prior drug use
-After physiological dependence develops, injections needed every 4 to 6 hours
-long term course (30 yr follow up):
*17% users
*7% methadone maintenance
*22% abstinent
*11% incarcerated
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Term
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Definition
-Caffeine
-Nicotine
-Amphetamines
-Cocaine |
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Term
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Definition
-most heavily used stimulant drug
-75% of caffeine is ingested through coffee
-Avg american drinks 2 cups/day
-stimulates the CNS increasing levels of dopamine, norepinephrine, and serotonin, and blocking the adenosine receptor (adenosine induces sleepiness)
-Causes adrenal glands to produce more adrenalin-increases arousal and activity |
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Term
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Definition
-Restlessness, nervousness, excitement, insomnia, flushed face, frequent urination, stomach upset, muscle twitching, rambling flow of thought or speech, rapid heartbeat, periods of inexhaustibility, physchomotor agitation |
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Term
Withdrawal symptoms of Caffeine |
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Definition
mild fatigue or drowsiness, headache, irritability |
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Term
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Definition
-Agonist for nicotinic cholinergic system, monoamine, and opioid systems involved in alertness and reward
-increases arousal, alertness, sympathetic activation
-Prevalance: 30% of population
*men smoke most in Russia, Indonesia, Ukraine, Kenya |
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Term
Health consequences of smoking
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Definition
-coronary heart disease
-stroke
-respiratory infections
-emphysema
-lung cancer
-reduced blood flow to skin: with age, gum disease and skin wrinkling
-pipes and cigars: lip, tongue, mouth, esophagus |
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Term
Fagerstrom scale for nicotine dependence |
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Definition
-a score of 5 or more indicates significant dependence
-a score of 4 or less shows a low to moderate dependence |
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Term
Nicotine withdrawal symptoms |
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Definition
Dysphoria, depressed mood, insomnia, irritability, frustration, anger, anxiety, difficulty concentrating, restlessness, decreased heart rate, increased appetite or weight gain |
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Term
Nicotine and activity in the brain |
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Definition
-Nicotine exposure causes prolonged increase in glutamatergic activity, which stimulates dopamine release in nucleus accumbens
-Nicotine has a transient excitatory effect (2 min) and then inhibits GABAergic inhibition of glutamatergic and dopaminergic neurons |
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Term
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Definition
-over 70% of users wish they could quit
-After quitting, most relapse after a few days
-Only 7% are still abstinent after 1 year |
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Term
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Definition
-Dexedrine, Benzedrine, Methamphetamine
-Cause release and block reuptake of dopamine and norepinephrine
-Intoxication effects: Increased attention, decreased fatigue, decreased need for sleep, euphoria, self-confidence, alertness, agitation, paranoia, cardiovascular and cerebrovascular stress
-Rapid tolerance
-Lifetime prevalance: ~4% of population has tried amphetamines
-Dopaminergic downregulation probably persists months/years after discontinuation |
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Term
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Definition
Stimulant
-man made
-smoking produces a long lasting high
-50% of the drug is removed from the body after 12 hours
-increases dopamine release and blocks dopamine reuptake
-limited medical use |
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Term
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Definition
Stimulant and local anesthetic
-plant-derived
-smoking produces a breif high
-50% of the drug is removed from the body in 1 hr
-blocks dopamine reuptake
-limited use as local anesthetic in some surgical procedures |
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Term
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Definition
-blocks DA and NE, increasing the effects of these NTs(reward, increased arousal)
-Symptoms-Behavioral changes, irritability, restlessness, anxiety, paranoia, rapid heartbeat, dilation of pupils, change in bp, nausea/vomiting, muscular weakness, slowed breathing, chest pain, confusion, seizures, cardiac arrest, coma |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
Repeated dosing of cocaine |
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Definition
binging can result in paranoid psychosis
-prolonged use terminates in severe withdrawal associated with physical and emotional depression |
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Term
Hallucinogens and PCP
Intoxication symptoms |
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Definition
-behavioral changes, perceptual changes while awake, intensification of senses, dilation of pupils, rapid heartbeat, sweating, palpitations, blurring of vision, incoordination, synethesia, panic, tremors |
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Term
Hallucinogens and PCP
Withdrawal symptoms |
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Definition
some side effects include flashbacks and dehydration |
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Term
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Definition
mixed group of substances including LSD(thought to effect serotonergic neurotransmission), MDMA(ecstacy), and peyote |
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Term
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Definition
-AKA angel dust, manufactured as powder to be snorted or smoked. Although not classified as a hallucinogen, it has many of the same effects |
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Term
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Definition
-Cause the release of serotonin
-block the reuptake of serotonin by the synaptic terminal that releases it
-deplete the amount of serotonin in the brain
-binds to dopamine and NE transporters, potentiating both neurotransmitters
-produces widespread dose dependent depletion of 5HT transporter(SERT) at concentrations similar to humen use on autoradiogram assays. |
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Term
Intoxication effects of MDMA |
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Definition
-Acts w/in 1 hr
-Increased alertness and energy
-Emotional warmth, empathy
-sense of well being and elaxation
-Decrease social anxiety
-Enhanced sensory perception
-Possible hyperthermia
-Midweek blues-depressed mood which persists several days after intoxication
-increased aggression and anger-peaks about 4 days after episode
-In rats, a dose dependent increase in anxiety like behaviors for up to several months after administration |
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Term
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Definition
MDMA can cause increase in body temperature which can cause breakdown of skeletal muscles and kidney failure.
-Drinking of very large amounts of water to counteract hyperthermia can cause water intoxication, in which sodium levels in blood are disturbed by dilution(hyponatremia) |
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Term
Effects of MDMA on memory |
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Definition
-Short term working memory and learning deficits
-long term effects on cognitive function not well documented, but memory may be affected-effects may be potentiated ir caused by other types of drug |
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Term
Genetic factors in substance use |
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Definition
-Genetics play a substantial role in at least some forms of addiction
-genetics influence personality characteristics associated with risk for substance abuse-impulsivity, lack of concern for long term consequences, sensation seeking, aggression
-Genetics may also act through comorbid disorders such as MDD, bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, and antisocial personality disorder |
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Term
Disturbance of neurotransmission within reward systems of the brain |
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Definition
-Reward circuit activated when behavior enhances individual survival, social status, and reproduction
-drugs can hijack reward system |
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Term
Biological mechanisms
Nucleus accumbens and reward |
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Definition
1. Frontal, subcortical nucleus with high density of dopaminergic and opioid neurotransmitter systems
2. In animals, both naturally occuring rewards and rewarding drugs increase activity of accumbens
3. Electrical brain stimulation of accumbens often appears reinforcing
4. In humans, brain imaging suggests that accumbens is activated by rewarding experiences and drigs, most ultimately thoguh dopamine projections |
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Term
Nucleus Accumbens and functional organization |
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Definition
shell-receives dopaminergic projections from VTA and excitatory projections from amygdala, hippocampus, medial prefrontal cortex. Integral to reinforcement experience and learning
-Core-triggers motor response to cues that a reinforcer will be available in environment |
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Term
Mechanism for tolerance and withdrawal |
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Definition
-Release of NTs such as DA and cause reduction in # of receptos or damage to neurons
-Reduction in receptors or NT production may cause craving and withdrawal symptoms
-With addiction, craving or seeking behavior is maintained by glutamatergic modulation by orbitofrontal and cingulate cortex |
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Term
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Definition
-animals and humans form classical conditioned links between environment and stimuli and effects of intoxication
-merely seeing a picture of a cue (syringe), can elicit intense craving and physiological activation associated with substance use |
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Term
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Definition
-Stress increases use of substances and likelihood of relapse
-stress causes corticotrophin-releeasing hormone which initiates hormonal and physiological stress response. |
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Term
Behavioral and cognitive theories |
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Definition
-Children learn substance related behaviors from modeling of parents and important others
-substance use is a way of coping with stress
-substance use can substitute for failure to attain natural goals. |
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Term
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Definition
-Chronic stress combined w/ a substance supported invironment increases the risk of abuse
-substance use is more acceptable for men than women in many societies
-women's patterns of substance use and reasons differ from men's |
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Term
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Definition
Detoxification: controlled withdrawal from substance
Antidepressants and Sedatives: may ease withdrawal from some substances
(unclear if effective in reducing relapse)
-Antagonist meds block effects of drugs
-Naltrexone, nalaxone- opioid antagonists (used to reduce alcohol effects)
-Disulfiram (antabuse): induces nausea when alcohol is consumed: compliance poor |
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Term
Methadone Maintenance programs |
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Definition
Methadone: synthetic, oral opioid which is used to replace heroin
-blocks receptors for heroin
-no high, but methadone also addictive
-methadone users show relatively good outcome, less likely to relapse or engange in criminal activity |
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Term
Behavioral and Cognitive treatments |
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Definition
-Aversive classical conditioning
-covert sensitixation therapy (imagine bad consequences)
-Cue exposure and responses prevention (expose to cues for drug or alcohol use, but prevent use. Should lead to extinction)
-Cognitive and social therapy
-prevention |
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Term
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Definition
1/3 of Americans live w/ extreme stress
-psychological symptoms: anger, irritability, nervousness, lack of energy, fearfullness
-physical symptoms: fatigue, headache, upset stomach, muscle tension
-lie awake at night, overeating, unhealthy eating, skipping a meal, drinkers drank or smoke |
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Term
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Definition
Physical threat- bear attack
Exposure to severe cold
Sleep deprivation |
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Term
Chronic physical stressors |
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Definition
Drought, famine, parasites, combat |
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Term
Psychological and social stressors |
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Definition
relationship problems, debt, care for disabled/dying relative |
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Term
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Definition
With greater panic, fewer escape. everyone crowds one door instead of going to other, making escape difficult. As panic parameter increases, number of escaping from room decreases |
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Term
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Definition
Biological and behavioral response to threats to homeostasis, survival, or psychosocial status |
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Term
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Definition
Early research on ovarian extract on rats
-inject daily-> ulcers, enlarged adrenal glands, shrunken immune tissues
-Other subjected to cold, heat, forced exercise, surgical procedures had same effects
-General rather than specific responses |
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Term
General Adaptation Syndrome |
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Definition
1. Alarm Stage (emergency reaction, fight or flight)
2. Resistance stage (coping and fighting)
3. Exhaustion stage (onset of stress pathology) |
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Term
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Definition
-Initial response (sympathetic nervous system fast, hormonal responses minutes to hours)
-Mobilize energy from storage, inhibit further storage
-increast HR, BP, breathing
-Analgesia
-Increase alertness, inhibit sleep |
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Term
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Definition
-automatic response, but can be modified by learning
-wide range of hormonal adjustments
Stressor->brain->anterior pituitary->adrenal cortex->glucocorticoids
or
Stressor->brain->sympathetic nervous system->adrenal medulla->NE and E |
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Term
Sympathetic Nervous system |
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Definition
-Controlled by bunches of nerves called ganglions
-branches from the spine throughout the body
-during the stress response, functions to divert energy away from processes such as digestion, immune function |
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Term
Epinephrine changes during stress response |
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Definition
-fight/flight, increase carb/fat availability
-reinforces the sympathetic nervous system |
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Term
CRH-ACTH(Cortisol) changes during stress response |
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Definition
-Mobilize energy stores
-Enhance metabolism |
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Term
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Definition
-breif response
-increases mobilization of stored energy
-can be used for growth or for exercising muscle
-therefore, increased energy and growth of muscles |
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Term
Resistance or Adaptation stage
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Definition
-Resistance, or adaptation if stressor continues
-Fat: decrease glucose uptake, increase lipid mobilization
-Skeletal muscle:Decrease protein synthesis, increase degradation, decrease glucose uptake
-increased cortisol
-increased appetite
-increase vulnerability to anxiety and depression
-immunosuppression: decrease antibody production, decrease circulating lymphocytes |
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Term
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Definition
-resources depleted
-never store extra energy, fatigue rapidly, increase chance of diabetes
-increased BP, heart diseases, stroke
-Reproductive disorders
-hippocampus neurons destroyed
-immune suppression |
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Term
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Definition
exacerbating factors common in underclass:
-lack of control over stressors
-Inability to predict stressors
-Lack of outlets for frustration
-Interpretation of stressors as worsening
-Lack of social support |
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Term
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Definition
Doubles likelihood of second myocardial infraction or angina |
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Term
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Definition
-for men, keeping quiet during a fight had no measureable effect on health
-for women, four times as likely to die during the 10 yr study compared to women who told husbands their feelings |
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Term
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Definition
children- 8%
sex- 8%
money- 7%
leisure- 7%
alcohol- 6%
housework- 6% |
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Term
Dangers of watching sports |
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Definition
during 6 of the 7 german soccer games, there was an increase in the number of cardiovascular events , even more so during a dramatic match where the winning goal was scored in the alst minute
-more than doubles risk |
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Term
Stress & Brain structure and function |
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Definition
- mild and transient stress may enhance learning
-prolonged stress has severe consequences primarily due to cortisol effects on neurons and secondary glutamatergic excitotoxicity |
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Term
Prolonged stress & hippocampus |
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Definition
-Glucocorticoids damage hippocampal neurons
-dendrite and axon retraction
-inhibition of hippocampal neurogenesis
-long term depression( opposite of long term potentiation, which is basis for memory formation)
-Hippocampus size reduced in elderly with higher levels of cortisol |
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Term
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Definition
-stress can cause amygdala hypertrophy
-probably associated with negative affect, anxiety, aggression
-confined, stressed rates increases fighting behavior |
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Term
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Definition
Effects of sleep deprivation to 4 hrs/night:
-increased BP
-decreased parasympathetic tone
-increased evening cortisol & insulin levels
-Increased appetite & weight gain
-Increased ghrelin(appetite increasing hormone)
-Decreased leptin levels
-Degreased neurogenesis in hippocampus |
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Term
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Definition
-amygdala hyperactivated in response to bad things in sleep deprived
-connectivity analysis: amygdala appears to inhibit frontal cortex activity, while activating locus coeruleus(NE)
*More reactive to negative inputs when stressed |
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Term
Chronic Sleep Deprivation |
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Definition
-reduction in vigilance
-impaired fear conditioning
-spatial memory
-sleep deprived medical residents make 36% more serious errors than residents with sleep
-sleep deprivation results in similar or greater cognitive impairment than a BAC of .05
-Immunosuppression |
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Term
Sleep deprivation & behavior |
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Definition
-Increases fighting behavior in rats
-negative impact on mood
-distractability |
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Term
Coping strategies for stress |
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Definition
-Be sociable
-have a happy family
-grooming/touching/massage
-exercise
-gain control in life
-keep positive outlook
-Have a nurturing mother |
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Term
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Definition
Animal exposed to a larger, more aggressive animal and is defeated in a single encounter
-avoid defeat & humiliation |
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Term
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Definition
effects of stressors in psychological states |
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Term
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Definition
Severe, often very persistent disorder subsequent to traumatic event(s) such as combat, natural disaster, rape, assault
-associated with reexperience of traumatic event, enhanced arousal and avoidance of trauma related stimuli |
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Term
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Definition
A) exposure to traumatic event in which
*person experienced actual or threatened death or serious injury, or threat to others
*Person responded with intense fear, helplessness, or horror
B) Traumatic event reexperienced:
*Recurrent, intrusive memories
*recurrent nightmares
*acting or feeling as if event is recurring
*intense distress to cues that resemble event
*phsyiological reactivity to cues that resemble event
C) Avoidance of stimuli associated with trauma and numbing of responsiveness
*avoidance of evocative thoughts/situations
*inability to recall aspects of trauma
*diminished interest in activity
*social detatchment
*restricted range of affect
*sense of foreshortened future
-Duration more than 1 month
-causes psychosocial or occupational distress/impairment |
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Term
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Definition
-Called shell shock in WW I
-Combat fatigue in WW II
-occurs in 40% of rape victims
-20% of vietnam veterans
-Also common in first responders to disasters -firemen, police, rescue workers |
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Term
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Definition
10% lifetime prevalence in women
5% lifetime prevalence in men
Trauma exposure reported by over half of sample
Higher rates in developing countries |
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Term
PTSD after mustard gas experiments |
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Definition
50 years after experiment, 32% of the soldiers had current PTSD
factors that increased likelihood:
-being ordered to participate
-not having protective training
-seeing others in distress
-hispanic ethnicity
-more exposures
-physical symptoms during test |
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Term
Psychological manipulations |
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Definition
Humiliating treatments or other acts designed to create fear, terror, or helplessness in detainee |
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Term
Distress & loss of control highest for |
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Definition
sexual torture, physical torture, and psychological manipulations |
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Term
Childhood sexual abuse associated with risk for:
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Definition
Major depression
Suicide attempt
Conduct disorder
Alcohol dependence
Nocotine dependence
Social anxiety
Rape after age 17
Divorce |
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Term
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Definition
-Alcohol and other substance disorders
-Partner aggression
-Divorce
-Depression
-Occupational instability
-Legal problems
-Physical health problems |
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Term
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Definition
-severity of trauma
-small genetic factor
-female
-physiological hyperactivity
-history of adversity and trauma
-small effect of prior psychopathology
-lack of social support after trauma |
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Term
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Definition
-Associated with reduced cortisol levels; indicative of hypersensitivity of HPA axis
-may be secondary to trauma stress response, but could precede illness |
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Term
MRI structural anatomic findings |
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Definition
-affected individuals have reduced hippocampal gray matter on MRI scans
-may be secondary to trauma stress response, but could precede illness |
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Term
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Definition
PTSD patients lower activation in thalamus, anterior cingulate cortex, and prefrontal cortex while recalling traumatic event- lessened inhibition of limbic system |
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Term
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Definition
-exposure therapies(real or imaginary)
*extinction of response
*reduce avoidance, increase mastery
-Anxiety management
*relaxation training
*breathing therapy
*self-dialouge & cognitive restructuring
*education
-avoiding self-blame |
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Term
Pharmacological treatment for PTSD |
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Definition
Antidepressants (SSRIs) have modest effects
Atypical antipsychotic meds also appear promising, especially for psychotic symptoms (hallucinations), paranoia, dissociation, intense anger |
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