Moral / Temperance Model*Addiction as Sin or Crime Personal Irresponsibility Disease Model *Genetic and Biological Factors 12-Step Framework; Abstinence.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
& the certified athletic trainer
Advertisements

Biological Psychology
Neurotransmitters Many Neurotransmitters (NT) exist: -Dopamine -Adrenaline -Serotonin -Acetylcholine Drugs can either: –Increase the effect of certain.
How Drugs Enter The Body (1) Oral Administration - substance is ingested through the mouth - digested and absorbed in gastrointestinal tract - passes through.
Neural Communication Ramon y Cajal Nobel Prize in Medicine 1906 Sketch of retina (1900)
The Nervous System.
CHAPTER 6 IN THE SYLLABUS: Principles of Pharmacology Dr. Robert L. Patrick Department of Neuroscience Brown University Biomed.
Definitions Pharmacokinetics –The process by which a drug is administered, absorbed, distributed, bound, inactivated, metabolized and eliminated by the.
Chemically Modifying Behaviors Copyright 2010:PEER.tamu.edu.
Neurotransmitters, Mood and Behaviour
 What are converging neural pathways and their involvement in light sensitivity?  What are diverging neural pathways and their involvement in fine motor.
Today in class Notes Writing assignment Vocabulary Activity
The Biology of Behavior
Biological Psychology
WHY A COURSE ON ADDICTIVE BEHAVIORS? Study of Drug Use and Misuse Important A part of life in our culture - pervasive Affects everyone: we all have choices.
1 11 How is the Nervous System Organized? Chapter 2-Neuroscience: The Brain and Behavior.
Biology of Substance Abuse
Moral / Temperance Model*Addiction as Sin or Crime Personal Irresponsibility Disease Model *Genetic and Biological Factors 12-Step Framework; Abstinence.
Psychopharmacology The Study of the effects of drugs on the nervous system and behavior Drugs: – Exogenous chemical (not produced by the body) – Not necessary.
Chapter Four Psychopharmacology Version Dated 21 Sep 2009.
1 Chapter Four Psychopharmacology
  Everything psychological is simultaneously _________  Every idea, mood, urge is a biological happening  Love, laugh, and cry with your body  Many.
Pharmacokinetics: How Drugs are Handled by the Body.
Psychopharmacology (psychoactive drugs)
I NTERACTIVE P RESENTATION S LIDES F OR I NTRODUCTORY P SYCHOLOGY.
Copyright © 2009 Allyn & Bacon Chemicals That Harm with Pleasure This multimedia product and its contents are protected under copyright law. The following.
Moral / Temperance Model*Addiction as Sin or Crime Personal Irresponsibility Disease Model *Genetic and Biological Factors 12-Step Framework; Abstinence.
Psychopharmacology Inmaculada Ibanez-Casas, PhD
 chemicals released by vesicles in sending neuron  travel across the synapse and bind to receptor sites on receiving neuron 2 TYPES = EXCITATORY = stimulate.
 Neurons don’t actually touch  Separated by a tiny fluid-filled gap called a synapse  Neural impulses must be ferried across the synapse by chemical.
Neurotransmitters and the Endocrine System Chemical Messengers.
CHAPTER 3: BIOLOGICAL BASES OF BEHAVIOR. COMMUNICATION IN THE NERVOUS SYSTEM.
PSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY The scientific study of psychoactive drugs and their effects.
Moral / Temperance Model*Addiction as Sin or Crime Personal Irresponsibility Disease Model *Genetic and Biological Factors 12-Step Framework; Abstinence.
Psychopharmacology psychopharmacology – study of drugs and behavior
Synaptic Transmission How a neuron communicates with another neuron and the effects of drugs on this process. Types of Neurotransmitters.
Neurons, Neurotransmitters, and Systems. Structure of a Neuron.
The Biological Bases of Behavior: The Neuron What is the nervous system?
Inter-workings of the Brain
Surveying the Chapter: Overview What We Have in Mind  Building blocks of the mind: neurons and how they communicate (neurotransmitters)  Systems that.
Neurotransmitters Information in this presentation taken from UCCP Content.
Neurotransmitters Are Your Friends
© Paradigm Publishing, Inc.1 Chapter 2 Basic Concepts of Pharmacology.
Unit 3 – Neurobiology and Communication
© 2008 McGraw-Hill Higher Education. All rights reserved. Chapter 5 The Actions of Drugs.
Chapter 3 pt. A: Biology, Neurons, and Brain Imagery.
The Nervous System & Neurons Chapter 7 Click pic.
Bell Ringer Monday What are neurons and what is the structure of a neuron? Objective: Identify how neurons communicate and how certain drugs affect our.
Moral / Temperance Model*Addiction as Sin or Crime Personal Irresponsibility Disease Model *Genetic and Biological Factors 12-Step Framework; Abstinence.
Ch. 3 The Biology & Underlying Behavior Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
Neurons & the Nervous System Chapter 2: The Brain and Behavior.
The Nervous System-Part II
NEUROTRANSMITTERS THE MESSENGERS OF NERVE CELLS.
The Nervous System-Part II Neurotransmitters, Drugs and Disease of the Brain.
Neurobiological Theories of Mental Disorders
Drugs and The Nervous System
Biological basis of behavior(1) Prof .Elham Aljammas May 2015
Neural Communication.
MODULE 3: Neural and Hormonal Systems
Neurotransmitters Please pick up a chart from the AP Psych tray & get out your neuron diagram from yesterday 
Neurotransmitters.
Biological Psychology
The Nervous System Your body’s communication network & control center
What are the current guidelines for healthy living
How does a Neuron fire? Resting potential
Psychoactive Drugs Because the nervous system interacts with every other system of the body, dysfunction of any of its parts can have numerous effects.
Neurotransmitters.
Chapter 2: Biology, Neurons, and Brain Imagery
Neurotransmitters and the Synapse
The Nervous System Your body’s communication network & control center
Presentation transcript:

Moral / Temperance Model*Addiction as Sin or Crime Personal Irresponsibility Disease Model *Genetic and Biological Factors 12-Step Framework; Abstinence Education as Treatment Behavioral and Cognitive- Conditioning and Reinforcement Behavioral Models * Social Learning and Modeling Drug Expectancies and other Cognitive Factors / RP Family ModelsFamily Disease Family Systems Behavioral Marital/Family Tx MODELS OF ADDICTION: A SUMMARY

Psychological / PsychoanalyticDisordered /Addictive Personality Sociocultural ModelsCultural Factors Socioeconomics/ Social Policy Drug Subcultures Public Health ModelAgent, Host, Environment Interactions THE BIOPSYCHOSOCIAL MODEL: AN INTEGRATION MODELS OF ADDICTION: A SUMMARY

Medical / Disease Models of Addiction

BIOLOGY OF ADDICTION Introduction Why study addiction from a biological perspective? All Multicell Organisms Require Cell- to-Cell Communications Mammals Require a Variety of Sophisticated Systems for Chemical Communications

CHEMICAL MESSENGERS  Chemical Messengers  Hormones—Released from glands and affect other cells, including other glands  Neurotransmitters—More discrete and targeted than hormones  Receptors—Cell structures that receive the chemical message

Information Movement in the Nervous System Figure Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.

Chemical Signaling in the Nervous System Figure Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.

Release of Neurotransmitter Molecules Figure Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.

7 Neurotransmitters Related to Drug Effects The 3 Monoamines 1. __________ - common and pervasive chemical important in regulation of motor movements, emotional and cognitive processes, and reinforcement - schizophrenia (increased dopamine activity) - Parkinson’s Disease (decreased activity) Different drugs affect dopamine levels in different ways:  stimulants like cocaine and amphetamines increase dopamine activity

7 Neurotransmitters Related to Drug Effects 2. _____________ - important in regulation of sleep and mood monoamine theory of depression supported by: drugs that reduced Monoamines produce depression drugs effective in treating depression act on serotonin or norepinephrine 3. _________________ - important in the regulation of hunger, alertness and arousal; implicated in depression / mood regulation

7 Neurotransmitters Related to Drug Effects 4. _______________(ACh) - important in the functions of muscular activity, regulation of thirst and memory (e.g. Alzheimer’s Disease is related to loss of cholinergic function in brain) 5. ______________ - thought to modulate pain relief and to be associated with naturally occurring pleasures or “highs” 6. _______ - (__________-___________________ acid) referred to as an inhibitory transmitter because when it binds to receptor sites it stops the neuron from firing. What drugs act on this system? ______________________ 7. _______________ – throughout brain; excitatory

BIOLOGY OF ADDICTION neuron is like a rechargeable battery, can fire again after either: enzymes break down transmitter substance so it cant occupy receptor site anymore or reuptake: substance taken back into terminal button agonists and antagonists ______________ is any chemical (naturally occurring in brain or introduced) that fits a receptor lock and activates it; in general, ___________ increase the activity of the transmitter systems they operate on (ex.morphine is an agonist for the endorphins )

BIOLOGY OF ADDICTION ___________________ - don’t activate receptor sites and neurons to fire but still occupy site, preventing other chemicals from sitting there ex. _______________________________________ ___________________________________________ ___________________________________________

Some Mechanisms of Drug Action - drug can decrease or increase synthesis of neurotransmitters - neurotransmitter transport interference - neurotransmitter reuptake is blocked (pictured) - receptor activation; drug mimics neurotransmitter - receptor blocking

NEURAL BASIS OF REWARD & ADDICTION studies of stimulation of rat brains: There is possibly a final common pathway for positive stimulation and reward; this pathway is dopamine-rich; most drugs produce changes in this system, but “broccoli” (food) does not produce dramatic changes… Why not?

NEURAL BASIS OF REWARD & ADDICTION “body” and brain memories… amygdala activated prior to drug ingestion in cocaine users compared to controls “addicted brain” is qualitatively different from non-drug users even after drug use is discontinued e.g. _____________________________

A Few Definitions Psychopharmacology - study of the effects of drugs on behavior Pharmacology - the study of drugs and their effects; Pharmacokinetics - __________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ Pharmacodynamics - __________________________________________________ __________________________________________________

Brainstorm What factors relate to the way drugs affect us?

Brainstorm Drugs need to get into the body before exerting an effect...how many different ways can drugs enter the body and brain?

The 4 major routes of drug administration  Oral  Injection subcutaneous - intramuscular - intravenous -

The 4 major routes of drug administration  Inhalation - absorbed through lungs…  Absorption intranasal - mucous membranes of nose, sinus sublingual - under the tongue; absorbed through mouth’s mucous membranes transdermal - through the skin; examples? rectal - suppositories

Pharmacokinetics  Absorption: rate and extent to which drug leaves its site of administration; bioavailability: portion of drug that reaches its site of action  Distribution: where the blood flows most is where most of the drug goes (where? _________)  Elimination: liver enzymes play biggest part in expelling drugs; kidneys as well  where excreted? _______________________  drug half-life: ___________________________

Pharmacodynamics  dose-effect curve effective doses - % of people who experience effect of drug at given doses ED - 50 ; 50% of people taking specific dose will be experiencing the effect lethal doses - effect of interest is death! Defined as % of animal subjects who die LD - 50 Major Implications: _____________________________ ____________________________________________

Behavioral Pharmacology and Tolerance Behavioral Pharmacology - specialty area within pharmacology that concentrates on drug use as learned behavior General Definition of tolerance - reduced response to a drug after repeatedly taking it Types of Tolerance:  Dispositional tolerance - increase in the ______ _____________________ a drug after repeated use  Functional (cellular) tolerance- _____ becomes _________ sensitive to drug acute tolerance: occurs within single dose or first few doses of drug (e.g., Alcohol cocaine) vs. protracted:occurs after regular,chronic use

Behavioral Pharmacology and Tolerance Behavioral tolerance - person adjusts or compensates for their drug-induced behavior EX. We compensate for intoxicated behavior in diff ways _______ Issue of cross-tolerance EX. ________________________ tolerance to some effects of drug but not others tolerance syndrome doesn’t develop to some drugs reverse tolerance - becoming more sensitive with repeated use (examples ?)