1 / 36

DRUG OF ABUSE

DRUG OF ABUSE. By: Dr.Israa Omar. DRUG DEPENDANCE. It refers to the state of affairs when administration of drug is sought compulsively, leading to disturbed behavior become necessary to secure its supply. It comprises physical dependence, where there is distinct symptoms of withdrawal ,

halona
Download Presentation

DRUG OF ABUSE

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. DRUG OF ABUSE By: Dr.Israa Omar

  2. DRUG DEPENDANCE • It refers to the state of affairs when administration of drug is sought compulsively, leading to disturbed behavior becomenecessary to secure its supply. • It comprises physical dependence, where there is distinct symptoms of withdrawal, • and psychological dependence, which is craving for the drug .

  3. PHYSICAL DEPENDANCE • (tolerance and withdrawal syndrome) • Tolerance: The decrease in a pharmacological effect on repeated administration of the drug • Withdrawal symptoms: may be experienced upon discontinuation. Some of these symptoms are generally the opposite of the drug's direct effect on the body.

  4. PHYSICAL DEPENDANCE •Withdrawal symptoms( abstinence{avoiding} syndrome) can vary significantly among individuals and among drugs, but there are some commonalities. It is often characterized by depression, anxiety and dysphoria

  5. PHYSICAL DEPENDANCE • In general, the longer the half-life of the drug, the longer the acute abstinence syndrome is likely to last. However, with drugs with a longer half-life, the acute abstinence syndrome will be much milder than that of those with shorter half-lives.

  6. DRUG ADDICTION • It is not clearly defined but generally it refers to the state of severe psychological dependence that outlasts the physical withdrawal syndrome. • Drug abuse and substance abuse are more general terms, meaning recurrent use of illicit substances

  7. MAJOR GROUPS OF DRUGS THAT ARE SUBJECT TO ABUSE: • Opioids analgesics: Morphine and Heroin • General CNS depressant: Ethanol, Barbiturates , Anesthetics and solvents • Anxiolytics drugs: Benzodiazepines • Psychomotor stimulant : Amphetamines, Cocaine, Caffeine and Nicotine • Psychotomimetic: LSD, Cannabis, Mescaline and Phencyclidine

  8. Nicotine and tobacco • Nicotine isthe only pharmacologically active substances in tobacco smoke • One cigarette contain about 9-17mg of nicotine, of which 10% is normally absorbed • In the brain it causes neuronal excitation that can be blocked by mecamyline • In the spine it inhibits spinal reflex and thus causing muscle relaxation • In the peripheral tissues, nicotine stimulates the receptors at the ganglion and causes tachycardia, hypertension and reduced GI motility

  9. Main health risks • Cancer: lung mouth, throat, esophagus pancreas and kidney • Coronary heart disease and peripheral vascular disease • Chronic bronchitis • Deleterious effects in pregnancy: growth retardation, low birth weight, increased abortion rate and perinatal mortality

  10. Adverse effects • Tolerance: to peripheral (not central) ganglionic stimulation, perhaps due to desensitization of receptors • Physical dependence craving : increased irritability, anxiety, impaired performance of psychomotor tasks, aggressiveness and sleep disturbances, headache increased appetite lasts for 2-3 weeks : • Psychological dependence and addiction

  11. TREATMENT OF NICOTINE DEPENDENCE • Nicotine replacement therapy • Nicotine in patches (controlled release), chewing gums, nasal sprays several times daily (short effect) • Adjunct therapy • Bupropion, TCAs and MAOI • Clonidine – rarely used due to the side-effects (hypotension, drowsiness…) • Mecamylamine • Counselling the patients is very important

  12. ETHANOL • Most commonly taken substance leading to physical dependence (it is legal for adults!) • Rapid absorption after oral administration (measurable concentration after 5 min), immediately from the stomach • Wide distribution to the whole body fluids • More than 90% of ethanol is metabolised, less than 5-10% excreted unchanged in expired air and in urine • Saturation character of metabolism

  13. METABOLISM OF ETHANOL • Main metabolism via 2 subsequent oxidations: a) cytoplasmic alcoholdehydrogenase→acetaldehyde b) aldehydedehydrogenase→acetic acid this enzyme can be inhibited by various substances →‘disulfiram effect’ (disulfiram but also chlorpropamide, nitrofurantoin etc.) Symptoms: nauzea, flushing, tachycardia, hyperventilation, panic

  14. Limiting factor for ethanol metabolism is a NAD+availability

  15. PHARMACOLOGICAL EFFECTS OF ETHANOL 1. CNS EFFECTS - mainly depressant action at the cellular level symptoms of acute intake: - slurred speech, euphoria, motor incoordination, increased self-confidence, decreased concentration and learning ability. - higher plasma levels lead to mood lability, later ataxia, stupor(a condition near un-consciousness )and coma, death from respiratory failure 2. effect on peripheral systems -cutaneous vasodilatation ‘warm feeling’ and tachycardia,↑salivary and gastric secretion,↑ hydrocortisone,  oxytocin secretion and ADH

  16. TOLERANCE AND DEPENDENCE • Tolerance – it develops over 1-3 weeks of continuing administration = 2-fold decrease in alcohol potency. There is a cross-tolerance with many anaesthetics . • Mechanism: not well explained, changes in CNS neurons – down-regulation of GABAA-receptors, up-regulation of voltage-gated Ca channels and NMDA receptors? • Physical abstinence syndrome ( in 24-36h): tremor, nausea, sweating, fever, occasionally hallucinations and epilepsy-like seizures! • ‘delirium tremens’ over few following days: confusion, agitation, aggression, unpleasant hallucinations

  17. TREATMENT OF ALCOHOLISM • Disulfiram – blockade of aldehydedehydrogenase acummulationof acetaldehyde - nausea, flushing, tachycardia, hyperventilation, panic(fear of death within a few days) Aim: to make alcohol consumption unpleasant and intolerable • Naloxone and naltroxone– reduces alcohol-induced reward (unclear mechanism) • The drugs used to alleviate the acute abstinence syndrome: benzodiazepines, clonidine (inhibits exaggerated neurotransmitter release) and propranolol (blocks excessive sympathetic activity).

  18. CANNABIS AND CANNABINOIDS • Extracts of the hemp plant;originallyfrom Himalaya and Kashmir • Marijuana - dried leaves and flower heads • Hashish - extracted resin • Active substances: cannabinoids (lipophilic non-alkaloid natural compounds) • Routes of administration: mainly inhaled in cigarette smoke

  19. PHARMACOLOGICAL EFFECT OF CANNABIS CNS: combination of psychotomimetic, depressant effect • a feeling of relaxation, well-being and euphoria - without accompanying aggression • Uncontrolled laughing without reason • a feeling sharpened sensory awareness • impairment of motor coordination (driving), short-term memory and judgement. Feeling of time passing slowly, depersonalisation; increased appetite • Analgesia, antiemetic action • In high doses: hallucination, paranoia(personality disorder as well as mental illness), anxiety

  20. PHARMACOLOGICAL EFFECT OF CANNABIS peripheral effects: • vasodilatation (obvious on conjunctive{at place of union OR Join} vessels) • tachycardia • Bronchodilation (but opposite may appear during smoking) • reduction of intraocular pressure

  21. MECHANISM OF ACTION • Through cannabinoid receptors (GPCR type) • CB1- brain – highly abundant in: hippocampus (memory), cerebellum (loss of coordination), and substantia nigra (motor disturbances), hypothalamus (appetite) and mesolimbic dopaminergic pathway (reward) and cortex. • Mostly localised presynaptically – their activation inhibits neurotransmitter release Their paucity(few,less) in the brain stem  lack of serious respiratory and cardiovascular toxicity. • Endogenous agonist: anandamide • CB2- periphery - immune system (immunosuppressive effects?!)

  22. PHARMACOKINETICS - lipophilic compound - well absorbed, highly bound to plasma proteins, widely distributed and partially sequestrated in body fat → excretion lasts for days (can still be detected in urine)- liver metabolism to mostly inactive metabolites

  23. HARMFUL EFFECT - Relatively safe from the viewpoint of acute drug overdose - Problems are rather with chronic use:-Somatic effects: decreased testosterone and sperm count-Long-term psychological changes: apathy, impaired memory and decision ability, may promote schizophrenia in pre-disposed patients

  24. TOLERANCE AND DRUG DEPENDENCE • Tolerance and physical dependence occur only to a minor degree in heavy users • Withdrawal syndrome: weak and usually mild irritability, restlessness, confusion, sweating tremor and sleep disturbances

  25. THERAPEUTIC USE OF CANNABINOIDS? • Synthetic analogues • Nabilone and dronabilone • Potential indications • Antiemetic therapy in cancer chemotherapy • Analgesia • Glaucoma • Multiple sclerosis • Therapeutic values and utility? • Legal limitations

  26. PSYCHOTOMIMETIC DRUGS (HALLUCINOGENS) • They affect thought, perception and mood without causing psychomotor stimulation or depression • Effects: thoughts and perceptions tend to become distorted and dream-like, colours and sounds are more sharp. Induction of euphoria and happiness. • Different kind of hallucination (visual, auditory, tactile and olfactory appear). Thought process tend to be illogical and disconnected but subject mostly retain insight that these effects are drug-induced. Increased sense of empathy(the ability to understand the thoughts & emotions of another person).

  27. HALLUCINOGENS • Major groups/drugs (different classification in literature) • LSD and related compounds • MDMA (MethylenDioxyMethAmphetamine) and related compounds • Phencyclidine and ketamine

  28. LSD (LYSERGIC ACID DIETHYLAMIDE) It is among the most potent drugs known so far Mechanism of action: acting on different 5-HT receptors in CNS • mainly as agonist on 5-HT2Aautoreceptors in CNS   firing of 5-HT neurons in Raphe N • Somatic effects: sympathomimetic (↑blood pand HR,neurological (tremor, ataxia) • Tolerance: develops quickly (on CNS effects) • Adverse effects and dangers: persistent mental disorder, schizophrenia, injury due to violent behaviour

  29. OTHER HALLUCINOGENS • MDMA (MethylenDioxyMethAmphetamine, ecstasy) • Dance-floor drug • Stimulant and hallucinogenic effects (related to amphetamines) • Danger in acute overdose: exhaustions, dehydratation, hyperpyrexia, arrhythmias • Phencycline („angel dust“, PCP) • Chemically related to ketamine (anaesthetic drug) and originally also developed as a drug with this indication • Not so frequent among abusers, unpleasant vegetative(growing) effects • Some delusions and/or hallucination may turned into the violent behaviour

  30. PSYCHOMOTORSTIMULANTS 1)AMPHETAMINES ANDRELATED DRUGS 2)COCAINE 3)METHYLXANTINES (CAFFEINE )

  31. AMPHETAMINES AND RELATED COMPOUNDS • substances: amphetamine, methamphetamine and other drugs like ephedrine, phentermine, methylphenidate and MDMA. • Routes of administration: oral, nasal, inhalation and parenteral • Mechanism of action: indirect CNS „sympathomimetic“ effect – release of monoamines (noradrenaline, dopamine, or 5-HT) from nerve terminals in the brain • Main effects on CNS: locomotor stimulation, euphoria and excitement, increased self-confidence, stereotyped(fixed & hard) behaviour, resistance to fatigue, decreased appetite, anorexia • Peripheral effects: tachycardia and palpitations, ↑blood pressure, ↓GIT motility

  32. AMPHETAMINES AND RELATED STIMULANTS • Tolerance develops rapidly to the peripheral sympathomimetic and anorexic effects, but more slowly to the central effects • no clear-cut physical withdrawal syndrome → dependence seems to be a consequence of the unpleasant after-effects (i.e. fatigue, lethargy, anxiety, depression, hunger) and the effort to avoid them • full-blown dependence occurs in 5% of users – characterized by strong craving, increased doses, and common uncontrolled ‘runs’) • Amphetamine psychosis – closely resembles the Schizophrenic attack – incoherent thought, hallucinations, paranoia(personality disorder as well as mental illness), aggression. • Therapeutic use: minimal e.g.,narcolepsia(tendency of sleep) ,hyperkintic syndrome and treatment of obesity)

  33. COCAINE • the most expensive drug illegally sold • Routes of administration: salt - nasal or i.v. , free base: smoking-inhalation • MECHANISM OF ACTION: inhibition of catecholamine Re-uptake  increase noradrenaline and dopamine transmission indirect „sympathomimetic“ agent Pharmacological effects: very similar to those of amphetamines yet less prone to cause stereotyped behaviour, paranoia, delusions • Duration of effect is much more shorter (30 min, i.v.) than in amphetamines, rapid metabolism – liver and plasma esterase (hair deposit of metabolites). • no clear-cut physical dependence syndrome but depression, tiredness and dysphoria coupled with very intensive craving for the drug (strong psychological dependence

  34. COCAINE • Tolerance: in most abusers is to euphoria • Intoxication (overdose): tremor, hypertension, tachycardia, arhythmias, cardiac pain, hyperpyrexia, convulsions and shock even with fatal consequences Long term abuse • Characteristic behavioural changes: paranoia, anxiety, aggression, loss of social contacts • Increased risk of coronary and cerebral thrombosis • slowly developing damage to myocardium leading to heart failure may appear • Therapeutic use: rarely as a local anaesthetic drug in ophthalmology (event. nose/throat surgery)

  35. METHYLXANTHINES • natural alkaloids occurring in various beverages,namely tea, coffee, cocoa and cola-flavored drinks • substances: caffeine, theophylline, theobromine • a cup of coffee or strong tea contains 50-100mg of caffeine Pharmacological effects: • CNS stimulation • diuresis (vasodilatation of the afferent glomerular arteriole) • stimulation of cardiac muscle • relaxation of smooth muscle, especially bronchial. MECHANISMS: • inhibition of phosphodiesterase, responsible for intracellular metabolism of cAMP • antagonism on both A1 and A2 adenosine receptors tolerance and habituation develop to a small extent and withdrawal effects are very slight (headache, fatigue)

  36. THANK YOU Reference: RANG AND DALE PHARMACOLOGY

More Related