Stimulants - I: Cocaine

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Psychoactive Plants Stimulants - I: Cocaine

description

Psychoactive Plants Psychoactive plants act on the central nervous system - often by influencing neurotransmitters or endorphins Can be divided into three categories Stimulants – excite or enhance psychomotor activity (caffeine, cocaine) Depressants – reduce mental and physical performance (opiates, alcohol, kava) Hallucinogens – induce a dreamlike state and hallucinations (peyote, marijuana, morning glory seeds) May also be narcotic

Transcript of Stimulants - I: Cocaine

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Psychoactive PlantsStimulants - I: Cocaine

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Psychoactive Plants Psychoactive plants act on the central nervous

system - often by influencing neurotransmitters or endorphins

Can be divided into three categories Stimulants – excite or enhance psychomotor activity

(caffeine, cocaine) Depressants – reduce mental and physical performance

(opiates, alcohol, kava) Hallucinogens – induce a dreamlike state and

hallucinations (peyote, marijuana, morning glory seeds) May also be narcotic

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Narcotic Compounds By definition a narcotic drug induces central nervous

system depression resulting in numbness, lethargy, sleep

In current use, a narcotic is a psychoactive drug that is dangerously addictive

Addictive compounds elicit: psychological dependence, physiological dependence, and/or tolerance

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Psychoactive CompoundsStimulants Depressants Hallucinogens Cocaine Opiates THC (Marijuana) Ephedrine Heroin Mescaline Nicotine Alcohol Psilocybin/Muscarine Khat Kava lactones Ergot alkaloids (LSD) Betel nuts Tropane alkaloids Caffeine Salvinorin

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StimulantsCompounds that excite or enhance psychomotor activity

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Cocaine Major alkaloid in the coca plant

Erythroxylum coca Erythroxylum novogranatense

Small trees in genus Erythroxylum (Family Erythroxylaceae) native to Andes Mts. in South America

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Ethnobotany and history Cocaine use by the Incas Spanish conquest Introduction to Europe US – 19th century Late 20th and 21st centuries Sources of cocaine

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Forms of Cocaine Cocaine hydrochloride

Hydrochloride salt, or powdered form of cocaine, dissolves in water

Can be taken snorted or taken intravenously Freebase

Compound that has not been neutralized by an acid to make the hydrochloride

Hydrochloride is heated with water and sodium bicarbonate to form crack which is usually smoked

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Cocaine Structure

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Mode of Action on CNS Region most affected - deep within the brain (ventral

tegmental area) Nerve cells originating there extend to the nucleus

accumbens (one of the reward centers) At the synaptic level, cocaine blocks the re-uptake of

dopamine results in a build up of dopamine in the synapse which contributes to the high - later dopamine is depleted

Blocks reuptake of norepinephrine and adrenergic receptors activated

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Action of cocaine on CNS

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Effects of Cocaine Increased energy Decreased appetite Mental alertness Increased heart rate and blood pressure Constricted blood vessels Dilated pupils Increased temperature

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Highs from cocaine Duration of cocaine's euphoric effects depends on

the route of administration The faster the absorption, the more intense the high

BUT the faster the absorption, the shorter the duration of action

High from snorting may last 15 to 30 minutes, while that from smoking may last 5 to 10 minutes (high from smoking starts in 10 sec)

Increased use can reduce the period of stimulation

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Negative effects of cocaine use Addiction Tolerance Cardiovascular effects Direct effects on the heart Respiratory problems Psychological effects

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