Mer Scott
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PHCY320 (Psychiatry) Quiz on PSY12 Addiction, created by Mer Scott on 14/10/2019.

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Mer Scott
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PSY12 Addiction

Question 1 of 15

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Assessable Tasks
By the end of this lecture you will be able to:
• Describe the epidemiology and differences between recreational drug use and the diagnosis of addiction
• Describe the underlying mechanisms and site of action for commonly used recreational drugs
• Identify their main wanted/unwanted effects

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    OK

Explanation

Question 2 of 15

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Drugs ordered by overall harm scores and weights after normalisation (0–100) (Lancet, 2010)
1. - 72/100
2. - 55/100
3. (smoked) - 54/100
4. - 33/100
5. Cocaine - 27/100
6. Tobacco - 26/100

also cannabis - /100, benzodiazepiones - /100, methadone - /100

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    Alcohol
    Heroin
    Crack Cocaine
    Meth
    20
    15
    14

Explanation

Question 3 of 15

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DSM-5 Criteria for Substance Use Disorders:
The 11 criteria for substance use disorder are divided into four categories of behaviour related to the substance use:
1. impaired
2. impairment
3. use
4. pharmacological indicators ().
The severity of the substance use disorder is determined by the number of criteria the person meets:
Mild - criteria
Moderate: criteria
Severe: or more criteria
Within the last 12-month period,

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    control
    social
    risky
    tolerance and withdrawal
    2 or 3
    4 or 5
    6

Explanation

Question 4 of 15

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Probability of dependence when you have tried a drug once
- 32%
- 23%
- 17%
- 15%
Stimulants - 11%
Anxiolytics and Cannabis - 9%
- 8%

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    Tobacco
    Heroin
    Cocaine
    Alcohol
    Analgesics

Explanation

Question 5 of 15

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Speed of drug entry into brain dictates the intensity of the ‘high’.

Select one of the following:

  • True
  • False

Explanation

Question 6 of 15

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Tolerance
• Can and often occurs in the absence of – reduced response after repeated administration
• Usually due to receptor/ desensitization and -regulation
– repeated use of a drug in a given category confers tolerance to the drug being used AND others within the same pharmacological category.
• Metabolic or - increased metabolism requires increasing doses to produce the same pharmacological effect.
– increasing doses required to produce the same effect (learned behaviour)

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    dependence
    second messenger
    down
    Cross-tolerance
    pharmacokinetic tolerance
    Pharmacodynamic tolerance

Explanation

Question 7 of 15

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Neurocircuitry of impulsive-compulsive behaviuor:
• Associated with associated with drug, noy reward of drug
• Impulsivity and compulsivity are hypothetically drives that are “-up,” ie controlled by suppression of higher drives.
1 - impulsivity comes from the (NAc)
2 - compulsivity comes from the
3 - different areas of act “-down” to suppress these drives.

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    anticipation of the reward
    bottom
    top
    ventral striatum
    dorsal striatum
    prefrontal cortex

Explanation

Question 8 of 15

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Addiction - shifts from drive, that comes with migration from to circuitry. With chronic drug use, compulsivity develops, as the drive changes from (impulsive) to seeking r (compulsory) and anticipation of obtaining/consuming the drug.

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    impulsive to a compulsive
    ventral
    dorsal
    seeking pleasure
    elief from the withdrawal symptoms

Explanation

Question 9 of 15

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Choose the incorrect statement.

Select one of the following:

  • Psychotropics bypass neurotransmitters and directly stimulate receptors causing DA release and the high.

  • Withdrawal of CNS depressants usually involves neuronal hypo-excitability with varying degrees of severity – anxiety, possible hallucinations, seizures etc.

  • Withdrawal of CNS depressants causes significant activation of the autonomic nervous system: sweats, tremors, GI disturbances

  • Inhibition of the mesolimbic DA release commonly occurs in withdrawal

Explanation

Question 10 of 15

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Which of these is not a CNS stimulant/depressant?

Select one of the following:

  • Nicotine

  • Methamphetamine

  • Cocaine

  • Caffeine

  • Alcohol

  • Benzos

  • Opioids

  • Cannabis

  • Heroin

Explanation

Question 11 of 15

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Effects of Alcohol on reward:
Alcohol either acts directly upon µ or releases endogenous opiates such as .
It causes increased release in . Reinforcing effects also theoretically mediated by enhancing inhibition and reducing excitation.

Factors Associated With Alcoholism
• Environmental Factors
1. family or peer behavior
2. availability of other reinforcers (e.g. recreational resources)
3. job/educational opportunities
4. conditioned stimuli ( paired with drug use)
5. of alcohol
• Host Factors - Genes:
1. + and - for alcohol (reduced gene expression for alcohol dehydrogenase reduced
sensitivity to alcohol phenotype in alcoholics);
2. Antisocial or traits; risk-taking
3. Prior experience/expectations

Tx: Naltrexone on the reduces reward.
Naltrexone - µ : blocks effects of alcohol, decreases cravings. used to mediate ‘withdrawal’ over a few weeks to prevent symptoms like life threatening seizures.

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    receptors
    encephalin and endocannabinoids
    DA
    NAc
    GABA
    GLU
    group
    environmental cues
    Cost/ease of availability
    anxious
    VTA
    opiate antagonist
    pleasurable
    Long acting benzodiazepines

Explanation

Question 12 of 15

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Cannabis - THC and cannabidiol
• ‘normal’ dose - sense of well-being, relaxation, friendliness, loss of awareness, slows processes, impairs -term memory
• ‘high’ doses - can induce and rarely
• “” in frequent/heavy users characterized by the emergence of decreased drive and ambition, thus “amotivational.”
Cannabidiol = negative modulator of , potentially used to treat addiction, anxiety, psychosis and epilepsy

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    temporal
    thought
    short
    panic, toxic delirium
    psychosis
    amotivational syndrome
    allosteric
    CB1 and CB2

Explanation

Question 13 of 15

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Cannabinoids in the mesolimbic pathway:
interneuron feedback projections provide tonic of neurons
receptors mediate marijuana’s reinforcing properties

Opioids in the mesolimbic pathway:
Act on which arise in the and project to the . Opioids bypass the enkephalins and stimulate receptors causing release = high.

Nicotine & dopamine release:
Nicotine - full agonist at α4,β2 receptors on – cause prolonged channel until desensitization → prolonged burst of action potentials and consequently

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    GABAergic
    inhibition
    VTA dopaminergic
    CB1
    opioid neurons
    arcuate nucleus
    VTA and NAc
    directly
    DA
    nicotinic
    DA neurons in the VTA
    opening
    prolonged DA release

Explanation

Question 14 of 15

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The ‘amphetamines’
• Increase conc. of DA, by"
• inducing release of newly synthesized
• and inhibiting NA, 5-HT and DA and VMAT
is an uptake inhibitor only
• Methamphetamine - similar to cocaine but lasting effects with less euphoria, associated with -like psychosis
• Ecstasy - , dependence rare/debatable

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    synaptic
    stores of intraneuronal DA
    reuptake transporters
    Methylphenidate
    longer
    schizophrenia
    serotonergic

Explanation

Question 15 of 15

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The amphetamines ‘undesirable effects’
- change in of the human brain
- ability to cause infarcts ( tissue from oxygen deprivation)

Overdose treatment is with non-selective or or ß-blockers, for seizures

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    structure and function
    cerebral and/or myocardial
    dead
    diazepam
    Ca2+

Explanation