Psychopharmacology
Psychopharmacology is the study of the effects of drugs on the nervous system, and consequently, behaviour
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Drugs
An exogenous chemical not necessary for normal cellular functioning that significantly alters the functions of certain cells of the body when taken in relatively low doses
Drug effects
Observable changes in an individual’s physiology and/or behaviour
Sites of action
The locations where drug molecules interact with molecules on or in cells to affect biochemical processes
Pharmacokinetics
Pharmacokinetics: The process by which drugs are absorbed, distributed within the body, metabolised and excreted
Drug absorption - injections
Many routes of drug administration
1) Injection
Intravenous = inject into the vein. Fastest route
Intraperitoneal = inject into the peritoneal cavity - abdominal wall
Intramuscular = inject directly into a large muscle
Subcutaneous = inject into the space beneath the skin
Drug absorption - others
2) Oral
Most common form
Sublingual Administration = placing it beneath the tongue.
3) Inhalation
E.g. smoking, general anesthetic
This is distinct from insufflation (sniffing/snorting a drug)
4) Topical administration
Directly onto the skin (e.g. steroid cream)
Drug distribution
How Drugs Enter into the CNS
Drug metabolism and excretion
Drug effectiveness
The effects of a small dose of a relatively effective drug can equal or exceed the effects of larger amounts of a relatively ineffective drug
Dose response curve
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Most drugs have multiple effects
for example codeine while being an analgesic - reducing pain, also changes heart rates and respiration
Therapeutic index
The Therapeutic index measures drug’s margin of safety
Why do drugs vary in their effectiveness?
Sites of Action
Drug Affinity
Drug affinity
Affinity is the readiness with which two molecules join together.
Effects of repeated drug administration
If a drug is taken repeatedly, the effect of the drug on brain and behaviour can change
- some effects of drugs show tolerance or sensitisation and others do not
Tolerance
-> coffee becomes less and less effective
Sensitisation
an increase in the effectiveness of a drug that is administered repeatedly
-> repeated use of cocaine makes people become more sensitive to movement disorders and seizures
Compensatory mechanisms
2. The coupling process becomes less effective
Withdrawal symptoms and physical dependence
Placebo effect
Placebo effects in research