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Pharmcology Exam 3 Unit 6-8
Unit 6-8 Study Cards
25
Other
Undergraduate 3
05/03/2009

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Cards

Term

CNS Drug

 

STIMULATION

 

Sensation acuity increased
(greater awareness of environment)

 

Motor activity increased
(restlessness)

Definition
Term

CNS Drug

 

DEPRESSION

 

Sensation acuity decreased

(lack of perception, drowsy, not alert)

 

Motor activity decreased

(lethargic)

Definition
Term

 

 

 

 

Tolerance

Definition

-state where one must increase dosage to keep the desired effect. (always occurs in process of physical addiction)

 

"Metabolic" Tolerance -enzymes systems working differently, breaking drugs down faster, metabolizing/getting rid of drug faster.

 

"Receptor" Tolerance - up or down regulation of receptors, altering the need for drugs.

Term

 

 

 


Physical Dependence

Definition

 

 

 

-An adaptive physiological state that manifests by physical disturbances when withdrawn (withdrawal syndrome)

 

**Dependence causing drugs usually are both types at the same time.**

Term

 

 

 

 

Psychological Dependence

Definition

 

 

-a state of emotional reliance upon a drug in order to maintain a state of well-being. If tolerance does occur it is of "metabolic" type, no withdrawal symptoms.

 

**Degree of physical dependence is NOT synomymous with degree of "addiction"**

Term

CNS Stimulants

 

 

 

Amphetamines

(stimulates all areas of the brain)

 

d-amphetamine (dexedrine), methylpenidat (Ritalin), pemoline (Cylert)

 

Responses Observed

Definition

 

1.) Increased alertness, wakefulness, decreased fatigue.

 

2.) Mood elevation or euphoria, increased initiative

 

3.) Decreased appetite, but little effect in reducing food intake if eating for pyschological reasons.

Term

CNS Stimulants

 

 

 

Amphetamines

(stimulates all areas of the brain)

 

d-amphetamine (dexedrine), methylpenidat (Ritalin), pemoline (Cylert)

 

Mechanisms of Action

Definition

 

-incr. the release of NOREPI in the brain (CNS stimulation)

 

-incr. the release of DOPAMINE (causes side effects)

 

For AD-HD - incr. NOREPI which increases attention span of child.

-Perhaps incr. dopamine helps

Term

CNS Stimulants

 

 

 

Amphetamines

(stimulates all areas of the brain)

 

d-amphetamine (dexedrine), methylpenidat (Ritalin), pemoline (Cylert)

 

Therapeutic Uses

Definition

Schedule II


1.) Narcolepsy


2.) Weight control - highly abused, doesn't control psycholigical eating, tolerance occurs (too dangerous)


3.) AD-HD - Ritalin; classroom improvement in 70-80%

-active

-learning and discipline problems

-short attention span

Term

CNS Stimulants

 

 

 

Amphetamines

(stimulates all areas of the brain)

 

d-amphetamine (dexedrine), methylpenidat (Ritalin), pemoline (Cylert)

 

Side/Toxic Effects

Definition

1.) CNS - nervousness, anxiety, sleeplessness.

High dose: - schizophrenic behavior (incr. dopamine), hellucinations, paranoia, psychoses,tremors, dependence.


2.)Cardiovascular - incr. H.R., B.P., and possibly arrhythmias.

 

3.)Weightloss and malnutrition

 

4.)AD-HD - sleeplessness, excessive crying, suppresses growth (reversible if quit before bone closure)


5.)Poss. (rare) bone marrow supression. (periodic blood checks)

Term

CNS Stimulants

 

 

 

Amphetamines

(stimulates all areas of the brain)

 

d-amphetamine (dexedrine), methylpenidat (Ritalin), pemoline (Cylert)

 

Contraindications

Definition

1.) Insomnia or psychological disorders (suicidal, schizophrenia, etc.)


2.) MAO inhibitors


3.) Hypertension, cardiac arryhthmias


4.) Anorexia


Drug interactions: anticholinergics, anticoagulants, anticonvulsants, tricyclic (req. dose adjustments).

Term

CNS Stimulants

 

 

 

Xanthines

(caffeine, theobronmine, theophylline)

min. therapeutic use

 

Responses observed


Definition

1.) CNS stimulation - incr. alertness, decr. fatigue

caffeine > theophylline > theobromine


2.) Cardiac stimulant (rate and force of contraction) T>T>C


3.) Constricts blood vessels in brain, coffee may help headache (if causes is dilated blood vessels)


4.) Diuresis (theophylline > theobromine > caffeine)


5.)Bronchiorelaxation (req. higher dose than CNS effects) T>T>C

Term

CNS Stimulants

 

 

 

Xanthines

(caffeine, theobronmine, theophylline)

min. therapeutic use

 

Mechanism of Action


Definition

-inhibits breakdown of cyclic AMP.

 

-incr. CNS activity

 

-dilates bronchiles, pulmonary blood vessels, but constricts cerebral vessels.

 

-**Activates P450 enzymes so affecsts metabolism of many drugs.

Term

CNS Stimulants

 

 

 

Xanthines

(caffeine, theobronmine, theophylline)

min. therapeutic use

 

Therapeutic Uses


Definition

 

1.) Counter drowsiness

 

2.) Asthma, bronchitis, empysema (aminophylline - H2O soluble version of theophylline)

 

3.) Pain from headache (caffeine in OTC), no activity alone, only with other analgesics (painkiller)

 

Term

CNS Stimulants

 

 

 

Xanthines

(caffeine, theobronmine, theophylline)

min. therapeutic use

 

Side Effects


Definition

1.) Incr. heart erate, cardiac arrhythmias

 

2.) Incr. gastric secretion (caffeine worst culprit)

 

3.) Diuresis

 

4.) Excess CNS stimulation - convulsions, insomnia

 

5.) Withdrawal may causes headache and irritability

Term

CNS Stimulants

 

 

 

Xanthines

(caffeine, theobronmine, theophylline)

min. therapeutic use

 

Cautions


Definition

 

 

1.) Cardiac arrhythmias

 

2.) Ulcers

 

3.) Possibly birth defects with large doses in small animals, no sign in humans.

Term

CNS Stimulants

 

 

 

Cocaine

(cola leaves - powerful CNS stimulant - schedule II)

 

 

Same responses, MOA, side effects, cautions as Amphetamines


Definition

 

 

 

Uses - local anesthetics, only allowed in hospital/clinical setting.

 

-seems to elevate threshold for excitement of neuron by decreasing permeability to all ions.

 

 

Term

CNS Stimulants

 

 

 

Cocaine

(cola leaves - powerful CNS stimulant - schedule II)

 

 

Side Effects


Definition

 

Early: CNS stim. (anxiety, restlessness, confusion, dizziness, tremors, convulsions; incr. H.R. and B.P.

 

Later: may get depression, unconsciousness, and death. Cardio - will see later depressant action directly on heart (bradycardia, hyopotension, cardiac arrest)

 

 

 

 

Term

CNS Depressant Terms:


CNS depressant


Sedative


Hypnotics


General anesthetic

Definition

CNS depressant - agent decr. excitability of tissue in CNS. All drugs can be sedative, hypnotic, or gen. anesthetic depending on dose.


Sedative - administered for mild drowsiness or to reduce restlessness or anxiety


Hypnotic - admin. to induce sleep or allow to stay asleep, (can be aroused from sleep). *3-4 times dose of sedative.


Gen. anesthetic - depress CNS to cause unconsciouness (unarousable sleep), as well as analgesia.

Term

CNS Depressant

 

 

 

 

Barbiturates

Definition

-15 kinds commonly avail. in U.S (50 FDA approved)


Differ in:

-speed with which effects occur

-duration of action (into blood same rate, brain diff.)

-all can be taken orally, or I.V

 

phenobarbital (Lumina) - slow onset, long acting(all day)

seco & pentobarbital (Nembutal) - interm. acting (2-4hrs)

thiopental (Pentothal) - onset in secs., duration in mins.

Term

CNS Depressant

 

 

 

 

Non-Barbiturates

(aka minor tranquillizers)

 

*Does not have barbiturate structure*

Definition

 

 

 

-Ethyl alcohol

 

-Benzodiazepines: flurazepam (Dalmane)

                          diazepam (Valium)

                          chlorodiazepoxide (Librium)

Term

CNS Depressant

 

 

 

Non-/Barbiturates

(classified as sedative-hypnotics)

 

 

Useful Therapeutic Reponses

Definition

 

 

-Reduced anxiety

 

-Sedation (drowsiness)

 

-Hypnosis (sleep)

 

-General anesthesia

Term

CNS Depressant

 

 

 

Non-/Barbiturates

(classified as sedative-hypnotics)

 

 

Mechanism of Action - Barbituates

Definition

-depress all areas of brain

 

-inhibit reticular activating system.

 

-Prob. enhance GABA receptor complex, and enhance Cl- entrance to neurons and hyperpolarize cells.


-GABA independent

Term

CNS Depressant

 

 

 

Non-/Barbiturates

(classified as sedative-hypnotics)

 

 

Mechanism of Action - Benzodiazepines

Definition

-Bind to special receptor that decr. acitvity of brain. Also incr. activity of GABA.

 

-When GABA concentration decr. so does degree of depression.

 

-GABA dependent

Term

CNS Depressant

 

 

 

Non-/Barbiturates

(classified as sedative-hypnotics)

 

 

Mechanism of Action - Alcohol

Definition

-seems to incr. GABA activity with short term use.

 

-long term use (alcoholics) decre. GABA, therefore decr. anti-anxiety effects, thats why need to drink more and more to relieve anxiety.

 

-large ingestion of alcohol incr. dopamine release

 

**All activate P450 enzyme = incr. metab. of drugs

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