1 / 16

CHAPTER 12

CHAPTER 12. Sedative-Hypnotic Drugs and Alcohol. Sedatives and Hypnotics. Sedatives are drugs used to induce a mild state of CNS depression characterized by both mental and physical calmness Hypnotics are drugs used to induce and maintain sleep

nadine
Download Presentation

CHAPTER 12

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. CHAPTER 12 Sedative-Hypnotic Drugs and Alcohol

  2. Sedatives and Hypnotics • Sedatives are drugs used to induce a mild state of CNS depression characterized by both mental and physical calmness • Hypnotics are drugs used to induce and maintain sleep • The same drugs are used to induce both sedation and hypnosis; however, the dosage for inducing sedation is lower

  3. Classification of Sedative- Hypnotic Drugs • Barbiturates – a drug family of chemically similar drugs with similar actions and features • Benzodiazepines – a drug family of chemically similar drugs with similar actions and features • Miscellaneous nonbarbiturates – a group of drugs with dissimilar chemical structures and pharmacologic features

  4. Pharmacology of Barbiturates • Drugs classified as short, intermediate, and long-acting sedative-hypnotics • At low doses they increase the inhibitory effects of GABA • At high doses they act like general anesthetics, and can cause profound CNS depression and death in overdosage • Barbiturates are also anticonvulsants

  5. Barbiturates to Know • Phenobarbital (Luminal) – long acting (6-12 hr) “hangover” – often used for epilepsy • Pentobarbital (Nembutal) – intermediate (4-6 hr) • Secobarbital (Seconal) – short (2-4 hr) help falling asleep

  6. Effects of Barbiturates on the Sleep Cycle • Decrease stage 1, falling asleep • Increase stage 2, a lighter stage of sleep • Decrease stages 3 and 4 referred to as deep sleep or slow-wave sleep • Decrease REM sleep, and may cause REM rebound

  7. Adverse Features of Barbiturates • Cause drug tolerance with chronic use and drug dependency with abuse • Can cause a severe type of physical drug addiction when chronically abused • The withdrawal reaction from barbiturates can be serious, resulting in convulsions and death • Drug interactions, induce microsomal enzymes to increase the rate of drug metabolism of all drugs metabolized by the microsomal enzymes

  8. Reasons for decreasing use • Enzyme induction tolerance,  DMMS • Confusion in elderly • Automatism • REM rebound effect – nightmares • Dangerous with alcohol

  9. Pharmacology of Benzodiazepines • Drugs classified as short, intermediate, and long-acting sedative-hypnotics • Drugs also produce antianxiety, skeletal muscle relaxing, and anticonvulsant effects • Act by increasing the inhibitory effects of GABA • Drugs do not induce the drug metabolizing microsomal enzymes

  10. Effect of Benzodiazepines on the Sleep Cycle • Decrease stage 1, falling asleep • Increase stage 2 • Decrease stages 3 and 4 • Do not significantly decrease REM sleep • Benzodiazepines are considered safer drugs than the barbiturates, especially in overdosage

  11. Benzodiazopines to Know • Most frequent sleeping pill in hospital • Flurazepam (Dalmane) – long acting (1-2 days) • Temazepam (Restoril) – intermediate (8-10 hr) • Triazolam (Halcion) short • Decrease restfull sleep (stage3-4) not REM – Does not induce DMMS

  12. Miscellaneous Nonbarbiturates • Zolpidem and zaleplon are short-acting hypnotics that do not disrupt the sleep cycle • These drugs increase the inhibitory effects of GABA but differently than other drugs • Both drugs are considered to be safer than other hypnotics and are at low risk for abuse • Side effects include dizziness, headache, GI disturbances, and mental confusion

  13. To Know • Zolpidem (Ambien) short acting (2-3 hr) doesn’t alter stage 3-4 or REM • Zaleplon (Sonata) similar to Ambien

  14. Alcohol • Classified as a CNS depressant drug • Unlike other drugs, alcohol provides nutritional calories • Like other drugs of abuse, alcohol causes development of drug tolerance, dependency, and withdrawal reactions • Most of the pharmacology of alcohol centers around its chronic use, abuse, and toxicology

  15. Alcohol • Metabolized at a constant rate • 10-15 cc alcohol = oz vodka = beer = glass wine • Toxic effect: • Low dose = carbohydrate • High dose or with Tylenol = Toxic

  16. Disulfiram (Antibuse) • Used to treat alcoholism and deter drinking • Disulfiram inhibits metabolism of alcohol, allowing acetaldehyde to accumulate • Increased acetaldehyde produces severe nausea, vomiting, headache, and hypotension • Alcoholics take the drug on a daily basis, knowing that if they drink any alcohol they will become violently ill

More Related