Title: Neuropharmacology
1Neuropharmacology
- Effects of drugs on the nervous system
- Brain is seat of integration of nervous activity
and consciousness - Drug effects on CNS affects behaviour, moods,
cognitive ability, motor activity, sensory
interpretation - Psychopharmacology
2The Grand Scheme
- CNS Structure and Function
- Methods of research in Behavioural
Psychopharmacology - Neurotransmitters and the CNS
- Neurodegenerative disorders
3And then.
- Drug dependance and addiction
- Alcohol, CNS stimulators, cannabinoids, opiates
- Anaesthetics
- Affective disorders
- Anxiety disorders
- Schizophrenia
4Psychoactive drugs
- Found throughout recorded history
- Opium poppy
- Neolithic burial sites
- Alcohol
- Ancient Mesopotamia laws to control drinking
- Peyote cactus (mescaline)
- Native Americans
- Amanita mushroom
- Vikings
5Curative or Medicinal Effects
- Coca leaves (cocaine)
- S.American silver mines increase mental and
physical vigilance in low PO2 environment - Tea (caffeine)
- General tonic for the sages of Ancient China
- Indian snake root (rauwolfia serpenina)
- Treatment for manic excitement, hallucinations,
delusion - Reserpine depletes dopamine stores
6Psychoactive Drugs 1000s of drugs only a few
main CLASSES
7Common Mechanisms
- CNS stimulants eg amphetamine (amine), cocaine
(alkaloid) - Alertness ?, faster behavioural responses
- Stimulate release of dopamine, inhibits its
inactivation - Most CNS stimulants boost dopamine and/or
adrenaline
8CNS depressants
- Eg alcohol, barbiturates
- Feelings of sleepiness, impaired psychomotor
functions - CNS depressants affect the GABA (?
amino butyric acid) receptor - GABA-ergic drugs inhibit neuronal activity
9Drugs ve and ve effects
- Alcohol (aggression, antisocial behaviour,
criminal behaviour) - Cocaine (aggression, suspicion)
- Antidepressants (drowsiness, dry mouth)
- Antipsychotics (drowsiness, dry mouth etc)
- Tolerance (adaptive change in CNS)
- Dependance (no benefit only satisfy craving etc)
10Divisions of the Nervous System
Rest and digestion
Fight and flight
11Sensory afferent neurons
- Sensory (afferent towards)
- Chemoreceptors
- Mechanoreceptors
- Nociceptors
- Photoreceptors
- Thermoreceptors
12Polysynaptic Reflex
Effectors Muscles Glands
Conscious or unconscious PROCESSING
13Reaction Times vary with complexity of task
- 1ms delay for each synapse
- Time between input and output increase with the
number of synapses - Monosynaptic knee jerk takes around 30ms
- Reaction time task 200ms
- Choice reaction time task gt450ms
- Reaction time ? Information processing
- Sensitive to drug effects
- CNS stimulants reduce reaction time
- CNS depressant drugs retard reaction time
14The Brain (Cerebral cortex)
15Cerebrospinal Fluid (CSF)
16CSF-filled subarachnoid space
17Typical vs Brain Capillaries
18Blood Brain Barrier selectively permeable (not
impermeable)
- Typical capillaries
- Intercellular clefts
- Fenestrations
- Pinocytotic vesicles
- Brain capillaries
- IC clefts closed
- (tight junctions)
- Fenestrations absent
- Pinocytotic vesicles rare
- Glial feet extensions of astrocytes surround
capillaries
19Blood-Brain barrier not complete
- Area Postrema (or CTZ chemical trigger zone)
- Medulla of brain stem
- vomiting centre
- Median eminence of the hypothalamus
- Hypothalamic neurotransmitters ? anterior
pituitary
20Limited permeability and drug action
- Physostigmine readily crosses barrier
- Useful for treating intoxication from pesticides
- Increases availability of acetylcholine
- Neostigmine is excluded from brain
- increases Ach only peripherally
- Neostigmine can treat myasthenia gravis without
CNS side effects, but not pesticide induced
intoxication
21Regions of the Brain
22Telencephalon
- Cerebral cortex
- Limbic system
- Moods, emotions, learning,memory
- Basal ganglia
- Voluntary movement
23The Limbic System
24Basal Ganglia dopamine
(corpus striatum)
(mesencephalon)
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26Metencephalon and myelencephalon (medulla) of
hind brain
- Cerebellum
- Pons/medulla brainstem
- Vasomotor, cardiac centre, respiratory centre,
vomiting, cough - Brainstem death (o.d. CNS depressants)
27Ascending Reticular Activating System
- ARAS fibre bundle runs through core of
brainstem into thalamus - Maintains arousal
- Sedative-hypnotic drugs reduce basic ARAS
activity sleepiness - Antipsychotic drugs (eg chlorpromazine) reduce
sensory and cortical input to ARAS - Person awake, but less arousable either by
environmental events or their own
thoughts/feelings
28Neurones
- 100 trillion (1012)
- Each neuron connects to 1000 10000 others
- 1g cortex 109 synapses
- Lost at 20000 per day
29The Neurone
- Soma (cell body
- Dendrites (and dendritic spines)
- Receive signals from other cells via a gap called
the synapse - Axons
- Single tubular extension conducts electrical
signal to terminal boutons
30Formation of Myelin Sheath
CNS
31Axonal Transport
KINESIN
DYNEIN
32Action Potential All or Nothing
33The Neural Code
- Discharge frequency dependant upon stimulus
intensity - Action potential must be re-set before another
can be triggered - Refractory period
34The Resting Potential
Differential permeability Electrostatic
gradient -70mV (inside vs outside)
35Saltatory Conduction
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37Summation of IPSP/EPSP
38THE SYNAPSE
presynaptic
postsynaptic