This document provides information on drug addiction, intolerance, dependence, and idiosyncrasy. It discusses what causes addiction, the stages of addiction, top abused drugs and their side effects and health consequences. It defines intolerance as experiencing toxic effects from therapeutic doses of a drug. Idiosyncrasy is an abnormal genetic reaction to a chemical producing an unusual response. Dependence occurs when drug use is prioritized over basic needs despite health risks. Tachyphylaxis is rapid tolerance development from repeated high doses. Spare receptors are those not occupied to produce maximum drug response.
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Drug addiction, tolerance and depandance
1. DRUG ADDICTION,
INTOLERANCE, DEPENDANCE
& IDIOSYNCRASY
Presented by:
Ahsas Goyal
Assistant Professor
Department of Pharmacology,
Institute of Pharmaceutical Research, GLA University,
Mathura (U.P.), India
2. DRUG ADDICTION
WHAT IS ADDICTION?
• Addiction is not limited to drugs and alcohol. People can be addicted
to many things, such as food, gambling, shopping, or most anything that
gets in the way of a healthy lifestyle. When things get out of hand, and
people behave compulsively, regardless of the consequences.
• When the person is no longer in charge of their life, regardless of the
triggering mechanism, they are addicted. The addiction can take over a
person’s entire life. Nothing else matters.
3. DRUG ADDICTION
• Drug addiction is a chronic disease affecting the brain, and just about
everyone is different.
• Drugs affect different people in different ways. One person can take
and abuse drugs, yet never become addicted, while another merely has
one experience and is immediately hooked.
4. WHAT CAUSES DRUG
ADDICTION?
• There are several factors and causes to consider with addiction, first
there is a genetic component, that is, what is passed on to you through
your family.
• If your blood relatives had a predisposition to become addicted,
chances are you have that same tendency.
• Personality contributes to drug addiction.
• Peer pressure is huge, both for teenagers and adults alike.
6. STAGES OF ADDICTION
STAGE 1
• CURIOSITY IS THE MOTIVATOR
• LEARNING TO TRUST/MISTRUST THE DRUG USED
• “HIGH” IS STILLA NEW FEELING
STAGE 2
• USER IS THINKING MORE ABOUT DRUGS
• PREVIOUS RELATIONSHIP BECOMES DIFFICULT
• USER USES WHEN ALONE
• USER STILL THINKS THEY HAVE CONTROL
STAGE 3
• SEEKS OUT THE “HIGH”
• HAS CONFIDENCE IN USING THE DRUG
• USER THINK THE DRUG WON’T HURT THEM
• PEER GROUP USES
STAGE 4
• CAN NO LONGER GET HIGH
• USER USES THE DRUG TO AVOID BEING SICK
• DRUGS BECOME THE CENTER OF THEIR LIFE
8. SIDE EFFECTS
• LOSS OF APPETITE
• HEADACHES
• ANXIETY
• ELEVATED BLOOD PRESSURE
• CHEST PAIN
• IRREGULAR HEARTBEAT
• COLD/BLUISH FINGERS
• DIFFICULTY IN URINATING
• CHANGES IN BODY TEMPERATURE
9. CONSEQUENCES OF DRUG
ADDICTION
Drugs are chemicals. Different drugs, because of their chemical
structures, can affect the body in different ways. In fact, some drugs can
even change a person's body and brain in ways that last long after the
person has stopped taking drugs, maybe even permanently.
10. HEALTH PROBLEMS
• Weaken the immune system, increasing susceptibility to infections.
• Cause cardiovascular conditions ranging from abnormal heart rate to
heart attacks.
• Cause nausea, vomiting and abdominal pain.
• Cause the liver to have to work harder, possibly causing significant
damage or liver failure.
• Cause seizures, stroke and widespread brain damage
• Produce global body changes such as breast development in men,
dramatic fluctuations in appetite and increases in body temperature,
which may impact a variety of health conditions.
11. EFFECT ON THE BRAIN, BIRTH AND
BEHAVIOR
BRAIN- All drugs of abuse - nicotine, cocaine, marijuana, and others - effect the brain's "reward"
circuit, which is part of the limbic system.
• Drugs hijack this "reward" system, causing unusually large amounts of dopamine to flood the system.
• This flood of dopamine is what causes the "high" or euphoria associated with drug abuse.
BIRTH-
• These and other illicit drugs may pose various risks for pregnant women and their babies. Some of
these drugs can cause a baby to be born too small or too soon, or to have withdrawal symptoms, birth
defects or learning and behavioral problems.
• Pregnant women who use illicit drugs may engage in other unhealthy behaviors that place their
pregnancy at risk, such as having extremely poor nutrition or developing sexually transmitted
infections.
BEHAVIORAL PROBLEMS-
• PARANOIA
• AGGRESSIVENESS
• HALLUCINATIONS
• ADDICTION
• IMPAIRED JUDGMENT
• IMPULSIVENESS
• LOSS OF SELF-CONTROL
12. INTOLERANCE
• It is the appearance of characteristic toxic effects of a drug in an individual at
therapeutic doses.
• It is the converse of tolerance and indicates a low threshold of the individual to the
action of a drug.
Examples are:
• A single dose of triflupromazine (antipsychotic medication) induces muscular dystonias
(movement disorder in which a person's muscles contract uncontrollably) in some individuals,
specially children.
• Only few doses of carbamazepine (antipsychotic medication) may cause ataxia in some
people.
• One tablet of chloroquine (anti malarial) may cause vomiting and abdominal pain in an
occasional patient.
13. IDIOSYNCRASY
It is genetically determined abnormal reactivity to a chemical. The drug interacts with some unique
feature of the individual, not found in majority of subjects, and produces the uncharacteristic
reaction. As such, the type of reaction is restricted to individuals with a particular genotype. In
addition, certain bizarre drug effects due to peculiarities of an individual (for which no definite
genotype has been described) are included among idiosyncratic reactions, e.g.:
• Barbiturates cause excitement and mental confusion in some individuals.
• Quinine/quinidine cause cramps, diarrhoea, asthma and vascular collapse in some patients.
• Chloramphenicol produces non dose-related serious aplastic anaemia (body stops producing
enough new blood cells) in rare individuals.
14. DRUG DEPENDENCE
Drugs capable of altering mood and feelings are liable to repetitive use to derive euphoria
(experience (or affect) of pleasure), recreation, withdrawal from reality, social adjustment, etc. Drug
dependence is a state in which use of drugs for personal satisfaction is accorded a higher
priority than other basic needs, often in the face of known risks to health.
• Psychological dependence It is said to have developed when the individual believes that optimal
state of wellbeing is achieved only through the actions of the drug. The subject feels emotionally
distressed if the drug is not taken.
• Physical dependence It is an altered physiological state produced by repeated administration of a
drug which necessitates the continued presence of the drug to maintain physiological equilibrium.
Discontinuation of the drug results in a characteristic withdrawal (abstinence) syndrome. Since the
essence of the process is adaptation of the nervous system to function normally in the presence of
the drug, it has been called ‘neuroadaptation’.
15. TACHYPHYLAXIS
• (Tachy-fast, phylaxis-protection) It refers to rapid development of tolerance when doses of a drug
repeated in quick succession result in marked reduction in response. This is usually seen with
indirectly acting drugs, such as ephedrine, tyramine, nicotine. These drugs act by releasing
catecholamines in the body, synthesis of which is unable to match the rate of release: stores get
depleted. Other mechanisms like slow dissociation of the drug from its receptor, desensitization/
internalization or down regulation of receptor, etc. and/or compensatory homeostatic adaptation.
16. SPARE RECEPTORS
• Receptors may be considered spare when the maximal response is elicited by an agonist at a
concentration that does not produce full occupancy of the available receptors.
History
• Nickerson (1957) - histamine on a guinea pig ileum preparation
• Furchgott (1964) - adrenaline induced contraction of the rabbit aortic strips
•Only small percentage of receptors had to be occupied by agonist to produce maximum
contraction(response)
• ‘spare’ or ‘reserve’ receptor
• proposed by Stephenson
17. • Not all of the receptors in the tissue are required to achieve a maximal response.
• Spare receptors exist when maximum drug response is achieved prior to saturation of all receptors.