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Drugs and Behavior Exam 1
N/A
42
Psychology
Undergraduate 3
09/30/2014

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Cards

Term
What is the formal definition of a drug?
Definition
Any substance that alters the physiology of the body that is NOT a food or a nutrient
Term
What are the three ways to name a drug?
Definition
  1. Chemically (e.g., N-methyl-3-phenyl...)
  2. Generically (e.g., fluoxetine)
  3. Trade (e.g., prozac)
Term
What is the definition of potency? What is the ED50?
Definition
The dose at which an effect occurs. The ED50 is the dose that produces 50% of the maximum effect.
Term
What is the LD50?
Definition
The median lethal dose; the dose that causes 50% of individuals to die
Term
What is the therapeutic index?
Definition
The ratio of the LD50 to the ED 50; the window of dose when which the drug is effective to when it become dangerous.
Term
A second drug can affect an already administered drug by antagonism and potentiation. What are these two things?
Definition
  1. Antagonism: when the second drug diminishes the effect of the first
  2. Potentiaion: when adding a 2nd drug raises efficacy or potency
Term
Know some factors (there's a lot) that can change how a drug affects individuals differently.
Definition
  • Sleep
  • Genetics
  • Weight
  • Tolerance
  • Diet
  • Hydration
  • Age
  • Gender
  • Context
  • Expectation
Term
What is the difference between arteries, veins, and capillaries?
Definition
Arteries carry blood away from the heart and veins carry blood to the heart. Capillaries connect them in the middle and is where things in the blood can diffuse into the body.
Term
What is subcutaneous injection?
Definition
When a drug is injected just under the skin.
Term
What intramuscular injection?
Definition
Injected into the muscle
Term
Intraperitoneal
Definition
Injected into the sac containing organs
Term
Depot
Definition
Released over a long period of time
Term
Intrathecal
Definition
Iinto the cerebral spinal fluid (CSF) at the base of the skull or near the spinal cord)
Term
Intracerebroventricular
Definition
Into the brain ventricles
Term
Intracerebral
Definition
Into brain tissue
Term
How does akaline and acidity affect absorption?
Definition
Drugs that are bases will be absorbed better in basic environments, and acidic in acidic.
Term
Why are lipid soluble molecules better absorbed?
Definition
They can cross cell membranes much easier.
Term
What is First-Pass Metabolism?
Definition
When drugs are taken orally, they reach the liver before they even enter general circulation, meaning they are being broken down before even getting into the blood stream.
Term
What is elimination?
Definition
It is the body's way of getting rid of the drug. It can either get taken out by the kidneys, exhaled, or sweated out.
Term
What is spontaneous motor activity (SMA)?
Definition
How much they are moving around in a given area; just physical actions and movement
Term
Stereotyped Behavior
Definition
The coutinuous repitition of simple, purposeless acts
Term
How is anxiety measured?
Definition
Elevated plus maze, where two arms have walls and two arms are open; higher anxiety animals will spend more time in the walled areas
Term
Analgesia- what is it and how is it measured?
Definition
Pain relief. Paw Lick Latency with the heated bottom. If more drug is administered, they will go longer without licking their paws.
Term
What is operant conditioning?
Definition
When a voluntary response (never was automatic) is affected by consequences (reinforcement and punishment)
Term
What's the difference between ratio and interval reinforcement?
Definition
Ratio depends on the number of responses that the animal has given, and interval depends on the amount of time that animal has waited, regardless of response amount.
Term
What is fixed vs. variable in reinforcement? What is the best reinforcement technique?
Definition

When the ratio or interval amount varies between reinforcements. 

 

Variable ratio elicits the greatest rate of responding.

Term
What is a progressive ratio?
Definition
Over the time, the amount of behavior required for reinforcement is increased until the breaking point is reached.
Term
What is the choice test?
Definition
When given a choice between two drugs, the animal will pick the lever that delivers a more reinforcing drug
Term
Conditioned Place Preference (CPP)
Definition
Animals will spend more time in a location that is assoicated with the reinforcing effects of the drug
Term
What is the difference between introspection and perception?
Definition
Introspection is a self-report measure about the effects of the drug, while preception is simply how well a person can detect a stimulus (e.g., how well they can feel just the physical effects of a drug).
Term
What are the four phases of a clinical trial? 5 if you count phase 0.
Definition
  1. 0: microdoses are given to humans and animals to see if there's any observable effects
  2. 1: A very controlled exposure to healthy individuals which is not concerned with therapeutic effects, only to make sure the drug is safe and without negative side effects
  3. 2: expanded clinical trials that are given to more people in small groups to guage drug's effectiveness
  4. 3: Cxperimental studies that cover a larger demographic of people
  5. 4: FDA approval of the drug and release to the public, followed by ongoing studies and follow-up trials
Term
What is the difference between cross and acute tolerance?
Definition
Actute tolerance is developed in a single session, while cross tolerance is when one drug diminishes the effect of another
Term
Pharmacokinetic tolerance
Definition
The increase in the rate or ability of the body to metabolize a drug; "what the body does"
Term
Pharmacodynamic tolerance
Definition
Arises from adjustments made by the body to compensate for an effect and continued presence of the drug; "what the drug does to the body"
Term
What is the opponent process theory?
Definition
The body compensates for drugs by stimulating a dysphoric state. When the drug wears off, the dysphoric state still exists, and the body takes time to remove this state.
Term
What does the medulla do?
Definition
Affects functioning of the autonomic nervous system, including breathing
Term
What center is most often involved in death due to overdose?
Definition
The respiratory center
Term
What is the periaqueductal gray?
Definition
Receptors from endogenous opioids are located here (pain relief)
Term
What is NFΚB? What is it involved in?
Definition
Nuclear Factor kappa B. It is involved in immune response, particularly in inflammatory pathways and cancer. Even more specifically it turns on the transcription factor for microglia ("immune cells of the CNS")
Term
How does NFkB work? What is the specific mechanism and pathway?
Definition
The dimer p50-Rel-A (p50/Rel-A) is bound to IkB (inhibitory kappa Bnormally. When NFkB is activated, the IkK (I kappa b kinase) phosphorylates IkB, causing it to let go of the dimer and become "iniquibitated," which signals it to get eaten up by lysosomes. The heterodimer p50-Rel-A then goes and binds to the kB transcription site.
Term
What are the three pathways that can activate CREB?
Definition
  1. Gq receptors can generate calcium, which can combine with calmodulin to create CaMK, which can phosphorylate CREB
  2. Gs receptors activate AC, which makes cAMP, which activates PKA, which through more steps activates CREB
  3. Tyrosine kinases can go through Ras, Raf, MEK, and ERK (the normal MAP-K pathway), but then instead activate RSK which can activate CREB
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