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Psychoactive drug

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A psychoactive drug or psychotropic substance is a chemical that acts primarily upon the central nervous system, but also to a lesser extent upon the autonomic nervous system and the peripheral nervous system. This alteration of brain function can result in temporary changes in perception, mood, consciousness and behavior.

These drugs may be used recreationally to purposefully alter one's consciousness (such as coffee, alcohol or cannabis), as entheogens for spiritual purposes (such as the mescaline containing peyote cactus or psilocybin containing mushrooms), and also as medication (such as the use of narcotics in controlling pain, stimulants to treat narcolepsy and attention disorders, as well as anti-depressants and anti-psychotics for treating neurological and psychiatric illnesses).

Many of these substances (especially the stimulants and depressants) can be habit-forming, causing chemical dependency and may lead to substance abuse. Conversely, others (namely the psychedelics) can help to treat and even cure such addictions.

An assortment of psychoactive drugs
Enlarge
An assortment of psychoactive drugs

Psychoactive drug chart

The following spectral-Venn hybrid diagram attempts to organize and provide a basic overview of the most common psychoactive drugs into intersecting groups and subgroups based upon pharmacological classification and method of action. Items within each subgroup are close to those of most similar action, and also follow a general placement in accordance with the legend below the diagram. Primary intersections are represented via color mixing.


NewBlankDrugChart.png

STIMULANTS

Sympathomimetic Amines
Psychomotor Stimulants
Amphetamines
Cathinone (Khat)
Methylphenidate
Cocaine

Aminoketones
Bupropion
Diethylpropion

SSRIs
Fluoxetine
Fluvoxamine
Paroxetine
Sertraline

MAOIs

TCAs

TeCAs
Maprotiline
Mirtazapine
Trazodone

Ephedrine
Pseudoephedrine

Methylxanthines
Caffeine
Theophylline
Theobromine

ANTIPSYCHOTICS
Atypical antipsychotics
Clozapine
Risperidone
Olanzapine
Quetiapine
Sulpiride
Ziprasidone

Typical antipsychotics
Haloperidol
Fluphenazine
Thioridazine
Chlorpromazine
Pimozide
Perphenazine

CBD

Cholinergics
Nicotine
Betel nut
Muscarine

Atomoxetine

DEPRESSANTS

Sedative Hypnotics
Alcohol
Ether
Barbiturates
Chloroform
Chloral hydrate
Methaqualone
GHB

Benzodiazepines
Lorazepam
Alprazolam
Flunitrazepam
Diazepam

Narcotic Analgesics
Opium
Codeine
Morphine
Heroin
Oxycodone
Hydrocodone
Methadone
Fentanyl

Psychedelics
Cannabis
THC
MDMA
MDA
MDEA
Mescaline
DOM
LSD
Psilocybin
AMT
DMT
Ibogaine

Dissociatives
Nitrous Oxide
Ketamine
DXM
Tiletamine
PCP

Salvinorin A
Ibotenic acid
Muscimol

Deliriants
Dimenhydrinate
Diphenhydramine
Scopolamine
Atropine
HALLUCINOGENS

Legend

Primary groups

Secondary groups

Tertiary groups

Quaternary group

A brief history of drug use

Drug use is not a new phenomenon by any means. There is archaeological evidence of the use of psychoactive substances dating back at least 10,000 years, and historical evidence of cultural use over the past 5,000 years.

While medicinal use plays a very large role, it has been suggested that the urge to alter one's consciousness is as primary as the drive to satiate thirst, hunger or sexual desire.

Some may point a finger to marketing, availability or the pressures of modern life as to why humans use so many psychoactives in their daily lives, but one only has to look back at history, or even to children with their desire for spinning, swinging, sliding amongst other activities to see that the drive to alter one's state of mind is universal.

This relationship is not limited to humans. A surprising number of animals consume different psychoactive plants and animals, berries and even fermented fruit, clearly becoming intoxicated. Traditional legends of sacred plants often contain references to animals that introduced man to their use.

Biology suggests an evolutionary connection between psychoactive plants and animals, as to why these chemicals and their receptors exist within the nervous system.

Other psychoactive drugs

Ways psychoactive drugs affect the brain

There are many ways in which psychoactive drugs can affect the brain (see neuropsychopharmacology). While some drugs affect neurons presynaptically, others act postsynaptically and some drugs don't even affect the synapse, working on neural axons instead.[[Citing sources citation needed]] Here is a general breakdown of the ways psychoactive drugs can work.

  1. Prevent The Action Potential From Starting
  2. *Lidocaine, TTX (they bind to voltage-gated sodium channels, so no action potential begins even when a generator potential passes threshold)
  3. Neurotransmitter Synthesis
  4. * Increase - L-Dopa, tryptophan, choline (precursors)
  5. * Decrease - PCPA (inhibits synthesis of 5HT)
  6. * Causes increased sensitivity to the five senses, due to an increasing number of signals being sent to the brain.
  7. Neurotransmitter Packaging
  8. * Increase - MAO Inhibitors
  9. * Decrease - Reserpine (pokes holes in the synaptic vesicles of catecholamines)
  10. Neurotransmitter Release
  11. * Increase - Black Widow Spider venom (ACh)
  12. * Decrease - Botulinum Toxin (ACh), Tetanus (GABA)
  13. Agonists - Mimic the original neurotransmitters and activate the receptors
  14. * Muscarine, Nicotine (ACh)
  15. * AMDA, NMDA (Glu)
  16. * Alcohol, Benzodiazepines (GABA)
  17. Antagonists - Bind to the receptor sites and block activation
  18. * Atropine, Curare (ACh)
  19. * PCP (Glu)
  20. * Caffeine (adenosine)
  21. Prevent ACh Breakdown
  22. *Insecticides, Nerve Gas
  23. Prevent Reuptake
  24. * Cocaine (DA), Amphetamines (E)
  25. * Tricyclics, SSRIs (5-HT, NE)
- based on information taught in NSC 201, Vanderbilt University [[Citing sources citation needed]] ''

Philosophy and Morality of psychoactive drugs

For thousands of years, people have studied psychoactive drugs, both by observation and ingestion. However, humanity remains bitterly divided regarding psychoactive drugs, and their value and use has long been an issue of major philosophical and moral contention, even to the point of war (the Opium Wars being a prime example of a war being fought over psychoactives). A majority of youths and adults consume one or more psychoactive drugs. In the West, the most common by numbers of users are caffeine, alcohol, and nicotine, in that order. Most people accept restrictions on some and the prohibition of others, especially the "hard" drugs, which are generally illegal in most countries.

Because so many consumers want to reduce or eliminate their own use, many professionals, self-help groups, and businesses specialize in that field, with varying degrees of success. Many parents attempt to influence the actions and choices of their children.

Debate continues over whether each psychoactive drug being considered is or is not spiritual, sinful, therapeutic, poisonous, ethical, immoral, effective, risky, responsible, recreational, a weapon to use against enemies, a boost to the economy, etc. These attitudes can often be deeply rooted in philosophical and/or religious beliefs, making it difficult to reach consensus or agreement on the proper moral and philosophical stance regarding psychoactive drugs. A major point of contention regards the role of government, whether it should, in respect to each drug, remain neutral, make use safer, educate for abstention, educate for moderation, regulate trade, require a prescription, restrict promotion, prohibit altogether, alter penalties, change enforcement, and so on.

See also

References

  • (Note: new ISBN for Intoxication comes in January 2007 and is 978-1-59477-069-2)

External links

  • [Erowid] – Extensive portal primarily relating to psychoactive drugs (Wikipedia article about the website – Erowid)
  • [The Lycæum] – Lycaeum Synaesthesia (similar website)
  • [TCCWiki] A free collaborative drug information project that anyone can edit

 


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