SUBSTANCE ABUSE PHARMACOLOGY - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 40
About This Presentation
Title:

SUBSTANCE ABUSE PHARMACOLOGY

Description:

SUBSTANCE ABUSE PHARMACOLOGY David R. Turpin MA, LCAS, CCS, DEPRESSANTS BARBITURATES SECONAL TUNIAL PHENOBARBITUAL TRANQUILIZERS Valium Librium Xanax Ativan ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:599
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 41
Provided by: DavidT122
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: SUBSTANCE ABUSE PHARMACOLOGY


1
SUBSTANCE ABUSE PHARMACOLOGY
  • David R. Turpin
  • MA, LCAS, CCS,

2
SLANG TERMS
  • Lovers Speed Blunt
  • Smack Rock
  • Sinse Zig-Zag
  • 8-Ball O.C.
  • Roach Uppers
  • Shrooms Oz.
    Roofies Downers

3
Addiction is a BIO-PSYCHO-SOCIAL process.
  • BIOLOGICAL Alcohol and other drugs alter the
    chemistry of the brain and body functioning.
    Continued use can cause damage or injury to vital
    organs. (?)
  • PSYCHOLOGICAL Altered brain chemistry affects
    the brains ability to think, alters feeling
    states, and impacts the personality of the user.
    (?)
  • SOCIOLOGICAL Behavioral interactions with
    family and social contacts are altered and/or
    misinterpreted by the user and those observing
    the behavior. (?)
  • There has been some debate re which type of
    addiction is worse
    Whatcha think?

4
BIOCHEMICAL
  • Biologically Alcohol other Drugs (interfere
    with/alter neurotransmitters), transmitters that
    allow neurons to communicate with each other,
    tell us/body what to do, how to react, what to
    experience etc.
  • These things all happen in the primitive
    brain (survival section)
  • The four major neurons addressed in
    addictions/abuse are
  • 1. DOPAMINE (governs- reward stimulation)
    (Cocaine, Methamphetamines)
  • 2. SEROTONIN (governs- mood sleep, appetite,
    perceptions etc. (THC, Hallucinogens)
  • 3. GABA ( governs- sedative anti-anxiety)
    (Benzodiazepines)
  • 4. ENDORPHINS (governs pain) (Opiates/Opioids)
  • When most addictive drugs enter they brain they
    give corresponding messages (more of this less of
    that)

5
Defining Terminology
  • Psychoactive substances that can pass the
    Blood Brain Barrier and become active in the
    brain central nervous system, with effects on
    mood, cognition, psychomotor movement, and
    personality.
  • Drug any chemical entity or mixture of
    entities that alters biological (body brain)
    function or structure when administered.
  • (We often say alcohol drugs which suggests a
    difference. It is
  • more correct to say alcohol and other drugs
    as alcohol is also a drug.)

6
Four Principles of Psychoactive Drug Use
  • Drugs, per se, are not good or bad. It is the
    resulting behavior associated with the use /abuse
    that causes judgment by the observer about the
    user. Good Bad
  • Every drug has multiple effects. Not just the
    subjective effect but effects on the brain/body
    functions.
  • Both the extent and the quality of a drugs
    effects depend on the amount taken (dosage), and
    potency. examples
  • The effect of any psychoactive drug depends on
    the users history and expectations. examples
  • (Ray Kiser, 2002)

7
How Drugs Enter the Body
  • Orally /Sublingual (drinking, swallowing , etc.)
  • When someone swallows a drug, it passes
    through the esophagus and stomach to the small
    intestine where it is absorbed into the tiny
    blood vessels lining the walls. It usually takes
    approx. 20-30 minutes for full reaction time.
  • Snorting (sniffing)
  • When drugs are taken this way they are absorbed
    by the tiny blood vessels in the mucous membranes
    lining the nasal passages. It takes approx. 3-5
    minutes for full reaction

8
How Drugs Enter The Body
  • Inhaling (smoking, huffing)
  • Smokes a joint or inhales heroin/crack,
    the vaporized drug enters the lungs and is
    rapidly absorbed thru tiny blood vessels lining
    the air sacs of the bronchi. From the lungs, the
    drug laden blood is pumped back to the heart
    and then directly to the body and brain thus
    acting more quickly than any other methods of
    use. (7-10 seconds for full reaction time).
  • Injection (IV or IM- mainlining or skin popping)
  • Injecting with needles, either into the
    bloodstream, or under the skin.
  • IV takes approx. 15-30 seconds, where IM takes
    approx. 3-5 minutes for full reaction time.
  • Anally (suppositories)

9
(No Transcript)
10
How Long Drug Use/Abuse
  • 100 yrs ?
  • 500 yrs ?
  • 1000 yrs?
  • 2000 yrs ?
  • Ever since the beginning of written history
  • Cave Walls, Hieroglyphics, Bible, Torah, Koran,
    Dead Sea Scrolls
  • All indicated the use/abuse of mind altering
  • mood altering substances

11
CATEGORIES OF DRUGS OF ABUSE






STIMULANTS
Depressants
Hallucinogens
Narcotics
12
NARCOTICS
  • OPIUM
  • OPIATES OPIOIDS
  • MORPHINE
  • HEROIN
  • CODEINE
  • DILAUDID
  • VICODIN
  • METHADONE

  • OXYCODONE
  • (oxycontin)
  • Primarily Physically Addicting

13
NARCOTICS/OPIUM
  • Has been around since the beginning of time, the
    first written account of its use dates back to
    approx. 4,000 B.C.
  • Homer wrote in the Odyssey When Helen said
    Into the bowl in which their wine was mixed, she
    slipped a drug that had the power of robbing
    grief and anger of their sting and banishing all
    painful memories. No one who swallowed this in
    their wine could shed a single tear that day even
    for the death of their mother or father, or if
    they put his own son to the sword

14
NARCOTICS/OPIUM
  • The ancient Arabs both used and organized the
    trade of Opium, (Why ?)
  • The Holy Prophet had forbidden the use of
    Alcohol not Hashish or Opium.
  • Some ancient descriptions of Opium
    include The Hand of GOD, The Destroyer of Grief,
    Fruit of the Gods, The Milk of Paradise!

15
NARCOTICS/OPIUM
  • It is easy to see why such a potentially deadly
    drug was sought after. The ancient Greek
    physicians said of OPIUM
  • it resists poison and venomous bites, cures
    chronic headache, vertigo, deafness, epilepsy,
    apoplexy, dimness of sight, loss of voice,
    asthma, coughs of all kinds, spitting of blood,
    tightness of breath, colic, jaundice, urinary
    complications, fever, dropsies , leprosies, and
    the trouble to which women are subject,
    melancholy and all pestilences.
  • OPIUM is the Granddaddy of all Narcotics. All
    Narcotics come from or are chemically altered to
    mimic the properties of Opium.
  • How big do you think the Opium problem is
    today? (Why)

16
NARCOTICS
  • Used commonly to control moderate-severe acute
    pain.
  • Can cause physiological tolerance (more to get
    same effect).
  • Can cause physical dependence (discomfort if
    abruptly stopped)

17
QUIZ
  • 1st popularized in the US, not as a
    devastating/disgusting or dangerous drug we have
    come to know, but a legitimate, researched "and
    widely dispensed medication which had the
    following attributes more powerful then any
    commonly used pain drug, cheaper to manufacture,
    will last forever and causes no lingering
    cravings.
  • Introduced When, by Who and Drug Name
  • 1888
  • The Bayer Pharmaceutical Company
  • The name of this new miracle medicine was
  • Heroin

18
HEROIN
  • HEROIN as well as various prescription
    analgesics, all function by binding with
    naturally occurring opiate receptors in the CNS.
  • HEROIN, known primarily as a street drug is
    typically snorted or injected, (IV or IM ? Where
    and how ?). The duration of sensation is
    usually 2-4 hours, this causes users to have to
    dose multiple times per day.
  • It can also be smoked (which we see increasing
    due to potency). This is called (?)
  • All Narcotics are cross tolerant which means
    ? (examples)

19
NARCOTICS
  • Pain Pills
  • A number of recent patients/consumers/clien
    ts present addicted to or for use/abuse of
    prescription Narcotics. All symptoms, cautions
    and treatments previously mentioned for the
    street narcotics remain. However, patients may
    present somewhat differently (examples).
  • Popular types of prescribed pain meds
    codeine, dilaudid, fentanyl,
  • demerol, methadone, oxycontin, ultram, percocet,
    vicodin, darvon, darvocet, lortab, etc., etc

20
NARCOTICS
  • With narcotic and opioid medications, there is a
    potential for the development of tolerance and
    dependence as well as a great potential for abuse
    and severe withdrawal reactions (why).
  • Are there any considerations that should be
    taken when a prescription abuser request/enters
    treatment??
  • Because Narcotics are so powerful, withdrawal
    will cause DEATH

  • (True/False)

21
NARCOTICS/METHADONE
  • Methadone
  • Is it villain
    or savior
  • What is it (?)
  • Discovered in 1937, by German Scientist as an
    alternative pain reliever (Dolophine).
    Rediscovered in 1960 by Drs. Doyle Nyswynder
    as a possible cure for Narcotic Addiction.
    Their research was supported both nationally and
    locally to address the Dreaded Scourge of
    America HEROIN Addiction. Realizing (already
    knowing), no cure for addictions they began to
    investigate the potential craving blockage
    aspects of this drug. They introduced the drug
    (Methadone) as a medication to assist in the
    tx. of narcotic addiction.

22
Narcotics/Methadone
  • Methadone quickly became the demon drug,
    treating addiction to one drug with another,
    its worst than heroin, they stay addicts for
    life it gets into the bones etc, etc. (True
    or False)
  • Methadone can be and is an effective Medication
    Assisted Treatment in conjunction with other
    therapies. (?)
  • Methadone patients can/do live productive
    healthy lives.. However, it can and is abused
    like all psychoactive drugs and has a
    potential to be lethal, particularly when mixed
    with other drugs.

23
OXYCONTIN
  • Oxy is a prescription painkiller used for mild to
    moderate pain control, chronic pain, and the
    treatment of cancer pain. The active ingredient
    is oxycodone. (effects similar to that of Heroin)
    Is time-released and contains much larger amounts
    of oxycodone than other painkillers (vicodin,
    percocet, percodan). Tablet form last for approx
    12 hours.
  • Used by swallowing tablets, crushing and snorting
    or injection. When snorted or injected effects
    sooner. Abusers are attracted because effects are
    very similar to HEROIN, and much cheaper (40
    milligram tablet cost about 4, but often sells
    on the streets for 20-40) also obtained by
    prescription for pain.

24
HALLUCINOGENS
  • LSD (acid, window pane)
  • PSILOCYBIN (shrooms)
  • MDMA (ecstasy)
  • MESCALINE (mesc, buttons)
  • PCP (angel dust, blast)
  • PEYOTE
  • STP, MDA (love drugs)
  • MARIJUANA ( grass, pot, weed, chronic, herb,)
  • Primarily Psychologically
    Addicting

25
Marijuana
26
CLUB DRUGS
  • Ecstasy (methylenedioxymethamphetamine)
  • GHB (Gamma-hydroxybutyrate)
  • Rohypnol (Flunitrazepam related to Valium,
    Xanax)
  • Ketamine ( anesthetic for humans and animals,
    injected, smoked)
  • Methamphetamine
  • LSD (Lysergic Acid Diethylamide 25)

27
CLUB DRUGS
  • Ecstasy Deve. In 1900 as appetite suppressant.
    Has effects of Stimulant and Hallucinogen,
    effects last approx 3-6hrs. Usual side effects
    (confusion, depression, sleep problems, anxiety,
    paranoia, dehydration, hypertension and heart or
    kidney failure) can last up to 1 mo. Significant
    increase in BP, heart rate, increased sense of
    alertness and energy.
  • GHB Sometimes used as Muscle Builder, and to
    enhance sexual performance. GHB is a central
    nervous system depressant that can relax or
    sedate the body.
  • At higher doses it can slow breathing and heart
    rate to dangerous levels. Its intoxicating
    effects begin 10 to 20 minutes after the drug is
    taken. GHB is cleared from the body relatively
    quickly, so it is sometimes difficult to detect
    in emergency rooms and other tx. facilities.

28
CLUB DRUGS
  • Rohypnol In the benzodiazepine family (valium,
    xanax). Is tasteless and odorless, dissolves
    easily in carbonated beverages. Effects are
    aggravated by concurrent use of alcohol. Even
    without alcohol, a dose of Rohypnol can impair a
    victim for 8 to 12 hours.. The drug causes
    profound anterograde amnesia, individuals may
    not remember events experienced while under the
    influence. One of the street names is the
    forget-me-pill, and has/is used in many
    reported/unreported sexual assaults.
  • Ketamine Actually classified as an anesthetic
    (animal). Popularized in the 1980s. High doses
    produced effects similar to PCP (dream-like
    states and hallucinations. (smoked-usually in
    marijuana, snorted, injected)

29
STIMULANTS
  • DEXEDRINE
  • CAFFEINE
  • METHEDRINE
  • AMPHETAMINE
  • COCAINE (CRACK)
  • Both Physically Psychologically Addicting

30
CLUB DRUGS
  • Methamphetamines A toxic, addictive stimulant
    that affects many areas of the central nervous
    system. Smoked, snorted, injected or orally
    ingested. Easily dissolves in beverages. Serious
    health consequences, (memory loss, aggression,
    violence, psychotic behaviors, and potential
    cardiac and neurological damage. Side effects
    Signs of agitation, excited speech, decreased
    appetite, and increased physical activity levels.
  • LSD LSD is classified as an Hallucinogen, it
    induces abnormal sensory perceptions. Its
    effects are unpredictable depending on the amount
    and purity, as well as the users personality,
    mood and expectations. Effects begin approx.
    30-90 minutes. Physical effects include dilated
    pupils, higher body temp., increased heart and
    blood rates, sweating, loss of appetite,
    sleeplessness, dry mouth nausea. FLASHBACKS! 1
    week to 1 year reported

31
COCAINE FACTS
  • 1855-1860 Cocaine isolated from other chemicals
    in the coca leaf

  • COCAINE HYDROCHLORIDE
  • 1884 Used as a local anesthetic
  • 1885 Rbt. Louis Stevenson wrote Dr. Jekyll and
    Mr. Hyde
  • in 3 days under the influence of cocaine
  • 1886 Dr. Sigmund Freud prescribed and used
    cocaine daily
  • gave to patients for a number of ailments,
    cure for the
  • disease of alcoholism and morphine addiction
  • 1887 Arthur Cannon Doyle-(Sherlock Holmes), used
    cocaine
  • continuously to combat fatigue depression.
    He also
  • included the use of cocaine by his major
    character. In plays like The Seven
    Solution. The actor playing Holmes actually
    injected cocaine on stage.

32
COCAINE FACTS
  • One famous line from the play was Quick
    Watson the Needle.
  • Remember Watson was a Medical Doctor.
  • 1888 A new medicine called a brain tonic,
    was intro-
  • duced in the southern USA- (?). The drink
    became
  • very, very, very popular because it tasted
    good and
  • gave you a definite rush due to its
    cocaine content.
  • 1914 Classified as a Dangerous Narcotic,
    cocaine largely
  • went underground used by affluent people.
  • 1960-70,80 With the big Crack Down on the use
    of amphetamines
  • cocaine began to re-emerge as a stimulant of
    choice.

33
COCAINE FACTS
  • Cocaine was used mainly by the AFFLUENT, it
  • enjoyed a kind of acceptance by the in-crowd.
    The
  • drug was seen/used/abused at all the
    fashionable places and glorified in novels,
    movies and other media.
  • Late 70s 80s
  • The Debut of a new phenomena
    called FREE BASING- The
  • smoking of Cocaine, made infamous by the likes
    of Richard
  • Pryor. Its used spread like wild fire
    further and faster than any
  • drug before, and went on to change the face of
    not only the USA but the world. How and why did
    this happen CHEAP, A
  • FASTER HIGH, NO NEEDLES AND YES
    TOUTED AS NON-
  • ADDICTING!!!!!!!!
  • DANGERS ?????

34
DEPRESSANTS
  • BARBITURATES
  • SECONAL
  • TUNIAL
  • PHENOBARBITUAL
  • TRANQUILIZERS
  • Valium
  • Librium
  • Xanax
  • Ativan
  • Primarily Physically Addicting

35
INHALANTS
  • SOLVENTS (polish paint
    removers, lighter fluid, gas)
  • AEROSOLS (paint sprays, hair
    sprays)
  • ADHESIVES (airplane glue,
    rubber cement)
  • CLEANING AGENTS (spot removers, dry cleaning
    fluid)
  • ROOM DEODORIZERS (glade, etc)
  • NITROUS OXIDE (whipped cream,
    laughing gas)
  • Primarily Psychologically addicting One of
    the most dangerous

36
Detection of Drugs in Urine Samples
  • Amphet/Meth 2 days (1 use)
  • Barbiturates 2 Days
  • Benzodiazepines 2 Days (1 use)
  • Marijuana 2 Days (1use)
  • 7-28 Days (prolonged)
  • Cocaine/Metabolite 2 Days (1 use)
  • 4 Days (daily)
  • Methadone 2-3 Days
  • Narcotics 2 Days
  • PCP 7 days (1 use)
  • Hair Test can detect presence for up to 90
    Days

37
ALCOHOL
  • A Central Nervous System Depressant, alcohol can
    truly be called, The Great Masquerader. It can
    do what most other drugs cannot It can MIMIC the
    actions of most psychoactive drugs
  • Beer
  • Wine
  • Whiskey or Distilled Liquor

38
ALCOHOL FACTS
  • The bodys ability to tolerate alcohol depends on
    the LIVER. Thus as we drink over a period of
    time the liver adapts and changes. It creates
    more enzymes to handle the POISON that is
    attacking the system. Unfortunately, since
    alcohol destroys liver cells, the liver
    eventually becomes less able to handle it. A
    condition called Reverse Tolerance
  • occurs. So a person who could handle 2 fifths of
    alcohol at age 30 will/can get drunk from a half
    pint of wine at age 50.
  • Alcohol is actually chemically classified as a
    Protoplasmic Poison. It can kill liver, brain,
    kidney and other tissue on contact. It affects
    all systems of the body.
  • Another danger of Alcohol is its involvement in
    SYNERGISM. What is Synergism?

39
ALCOHOL FACTS
  • Alcohol in its various forms has been around
    since the earliest of times. The oldest
    psychoactive drug known to man (probably
    fermented fruit) Later discovered that the starch
    in potatoes, rice, corn etc. could be
    fermented, first to sugar then alcohol. The
    concentration of alcohol in each type of beverage
    depends on the time fermented. Aside from being
    an enjoyable drink, alcoholic beverages were
    credited with reducing tension, lowering risk of
    heart attacks, and aiding people to cope etc.
  • Alcohol ranks third behind heart disease and
    cancer as greatest health threats in USA.
  • Alcohol is metabolized at defined, continuous
    rate based on a persons weight, amount, amount of
    time passed etc. We can usually determine how
    much alcohol is circulating in the system (BAC)

40
(No Transcript)
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com