Title: PS 3010 Behavioural Pharmacology lecture 4a, semester 2: 20042005
1PS 3010 Behavioural Pharmacology lecture 4a,
semester 2 2004-2005
- Opiates analgesia and abuse.
-
- Prof. Michael H. Joseph
- School of Psychology
2Introduction
- Opium is the dried sap of the opium poppy
- About 10 of opium by weight is morphine. The
other main opiate present is codeine, 0.5. - Opiates are properly referred to as narcotic
analgesics (cf aspirin), but in the US narcotic
refers to any addictive drug. - Hence we use the term opiates
- Heroin is a derivative of morphine which reaches
the brain more easily.
3Agonists Antagonists  Morphine Naloxone
Codeine Naltrexone Heroin Pethidine (short
acting) Partial agonists Pentazocine. Methadone
(long acting) Nalorphine LAAM (v. long
acting) Cyclazocine
4History and use
- Possibly the oldest psychoactive drug (pace
Carlsberg) - Early use against diarrhoea
- Treated as recreational drug like tobacco
- 19th C England, laudanum used in this way, also
to quieten babies. - Morphine available through doctors, leading to
medicalisation of abuse, as addiction.
5Absorption and distribution
- Morphine and Heroin are poorly absorbed orally,
and suffer first pass metabolism. Hence, to
produce central effects, they are injected.
Heroin can also be taken nasally. - Half-life of morphine is about 2 hours. Methadone
has a much longer half-life, and is used for
maintenance therapy
6Neuropharmacology
- The idea of specific opiate receptors came from
SARs (structure activity relationships),
and stereospecific binding. - Pert, Snowman and Snyder (1974), and other labs,
identified specific opiate receptors in rat
brain. - This was on the basis of stereospecificity
saturability, reversibility and high-affinity.
These criteria had been developed from
experience with other types of CNS receptors
7Enkephalins and Endorphins
- Why are there brain receptors for plant derived
drugs ? - Anticipating their discovery, putative ligands
for these receptors in the brain were named
ENDogenous mORPHINe-like compoundS - Identification of brain peptides binding to
opiate receptors very small by Hughes and
Kosterlitz (Aberdeen) met- and leu-enkephalin.
8Enkephalins and Endorphins
- Enkephalins only 5 amino acids long.
- Two versions, differing in one AA
- Structure verified when sequence found within
peptides being studied independently by Howard
Morris at Imperial college. - Cleavage of precursors c.260 AAs long to
enkephalins (5) and endorphins (16-30 AA)
9Large Precursor Proteins
- Pro-opiomelanocortin (POMC)
- a, ß, ? -MSH ACTH met-Enk ß-endorphin
- Pro-enkephalin
- met- and leu-Enkephalin (61)
- Pro-dynorphin
- leu-Enkephalin leading each of a family of
dynorphins - After cleavage stored in vesicles in respective
neurones.
10Opiate receptors functions and locations
- Name Avid binding
- mu (?) receptor morphine
- delta (?) receptor enkephalin analogues
- kappa (?) receptor cyclazocine
- sigma (?) receptor SKF 10,047 (opiate
analogue)
11Physical effects of opiates
- Analgesia (pain relief), reward - mu (?)
- Spinal cord, limbic system, striatum, neocortex
- Respiratory depression - mu (?)
- Constipation - kappa (?)
- Temperature control - kappa (?)
12Behavioural effects of opiates(humans and
animals)
- Sleep cause sleepiness, but do not increase
sleep times, unless through pain relief. - Performance humans low/moderate doses,
little effect high doses reduced motivation,
lethargy - Performance rats and mice increases in
unconditioned behaviours, LMA. - Higher doses stereotyped responses, but wider
range (e.g. social) than amphetamine.
13Behavioural effects of opiates (animals)
- Positively motivated behaviours increased on FI
schedule, but not on FR, at moderate doses. (i.e.
not simply activation) - Higher doses slow both
- Aversively motivated behaviours increased at
moderate doses. Higher doses impair avoidance,
but not escape (i.e. not simply analgesic). - No evidence for anxiolytic effect
14Subjective effects of opiates (humans)
- Increased sensitivity in hearing and vision.
Trance like state with vivid dreams, can be
auditory as well. Artists feel increased
creativity. - Intravenous injection causes the rush. Intense
momentary feeling of pleasure. - Mood euphoric mood as initial response over
time this becomes unpleasant mood, relieved only
briefly by the injections (Meyer and Mirin, 1979
hospital setting). - Performance little effect at low or moderate
dose. Famous US surgeon was an addict recent
reports.
15Subjective effects of opiates (animals)
- Performance Food seeking and shock avoidance not
disrupted in monkeys, unless in withdrawal - Drug discrimination Animals trained to press one
key for reward after a drug and another after
saline. - Morphine readily discriminable from saline.
- Morphine cue generalises to all the other
opiates, but only partly to cyclazocine. - Self-administration in non-humans Morphine was
the first drug for which this was demonstrated
(i.v.). Initially in dependent animals, later in
non-dependant animals.
16Tolerance
- Marked and rapid tolerance occurs to opiates.
- Can be up to 10-fold or more over a few months.
- Tolerance to analgesia and positive reinforcing
effects may be accompanied by little tolerance to
pupil constriction, and none to constipation. - Cross tolerance shown to other opiates, but not
to depressants, stimulants or hallucinogens. - There is however some degree of cross tolerance
with alcohol.
17Withdrawal
- Unpleasant combination of  restlessness,
agitation, yawning, chills and hot flushes.
Gooseflesh on the skin. - Drowsy/ deep sleep, cramps, vomiting, diarrhoea,
twitching and kicking of the legs, profuse
sweating opposite of effects of the drug. - Not however life threatening, as withdrawal from
alcohol or barbiturates can be. - Can be stopped by the drug, or to some extent by
alcohol. Is precipitated by an opiate
antagonist.
18Patterns of use
- Clear that not all users become addicts - stable
pattern of occasional use possible. - An addict is typically scoring at least once a
day, and more and more of their resources become
taken up with acquiring the drug. - There appears to be pattern of maturing out of
the drug in 30s/40s, after some 5-10 yrs of
heroin use. - Pattern (human or primate) is of regular use with
increasing doses to a plateau. - No intake-abstinence cycles as for
psycho-stimulants - appears to be a careful
titration of blood levels to avoid withdrawal
symptoms.
19Treatment I
- Therapeutic communities simply keep the addict
away from previous environments. Work at the
time, but relapse rate on leaving is high - 90 Â - Methadone maintenance can be taken orally, and
prevents withdrawal symptoms for 24 hrs. Blocks
subjective effects of heroin used in conjunction
with psychological or social treatments - a
holding operation. However the relapse
rate after that is high again. - LAAM (L-acetyl-methadol) is an alternative drug
to methadone with a longer half life. Â
20Treatment II
- Buprenorphine is another alternative. Binds to
mu receptors as a partial antagonist. Hence
blocks opiate effects with only mild agonist
effects itself. - It should be easier to come off, and reduce
withdrawal effects when later switching to
antagonist therapy.
21Treatment III
- Antagonist therapy patients withdrawn from
heroin 7 to 10 days. Clonidine may help to
manage the withdrawal (reverses the rebound
activation of the LC noradrenaline neurones) - As early as possible addicts are given daily
doses of an antagonist. naloxone, naltrexone or
cyclazocine. Blocks rewarding effects of heroin
subsequently - Better success rates. 70 were still in the day
program at the end of one year fewer than half
of these were still taking the antagonist.
22Treatment IV
- Another more controversial approach is rapidly
precipitated withdrawal using antagonists, under
anaesthesia so that patients do not experience
the withdrawal symptoms. - This approach pioneered in Spain by Juan Legarda,
but worries about medical complications while
under anaesthetic. - Studies are continuing to assess ethics and
applicability.
23Conclusions I
- Opiates are some of the oldest known, and most
effective, drugs for pain control, and the
control of diarrhoea. - Unfortunately, they have a poor therapeutic
index, and a high abuse potential. - Abuse of opiates is a widespread social problem.
- We have achieved limited understanding of the
biological basis of addiction. - This has not so far illuminated treatment.
24Conclusions II
- Neuroscience research has uncovered hitherto
unknown opiate receptors, and opiate peptide
transmitter systems in brain. - This has revolutionised our understanding of
brain chemistry, pharmacology and
neurotransmission. - However, so far, there has not been much clinical
benefit in the treatment of pain, or of opiate
abuse