Alcohol - Mind Map

Alcohol

Common Forms

Fermented

beer, cider, wine

Distilled

liqueur

How it's used

Socializing

Fuel

Burned

cleaning products

Classification

Depressant depending on the amount

How it works

It slowly moves through the body and is absorbed into the blood stream. The liver breaks it down and it is metabolized and passes through the system.

Regulation

Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau regulates Alcohol

21st amendment

The sale of alcohol within the state
The distribution of alcohol within the state
The importation of alcohol into the state
Statutes regarding who can possess alcohol within the state

Effects

Physical Effects

Trouble concentrating
Loss of coordination
Slower brain activity

Sleepiness
Mood swings
Dilated pupils

Stumbling
Passing out
Vomiting

Alcoholism
Falls, drownings, and other accidents
Head, neck, stomach, colon, breast, and other cancers

Heart attack and stroke

Motor vehicle accidents

Risky sex behaviors, unplanned or unwanted pregnancy, and sexually transmitted infections (STIs)

Suicide and homicide

Concerns

Injuries

Health Problems

Birth defects

Alcohol Use Disorder

Routes of Administration

By mouth as a drink

Opioids

Common Forms

Codeine
Fentanyl
Hydrocodone

Oxycodone

Oxymorphone

Morphine

How it's used

Opioids are often used as medicines because they contain chemicals that relax the body and can relieve pain. Prescription opioids are used mostly to treat moderate to severe pain, though some opioids can be used to treat coughing and diarrhea.

Classification

Schedule I: heroin
Schedule II: Dilaudid (hydromorphone), Demerol (meperidine), Dolophine (methadone), Duragesic or Sublimaze (fentanyl), morphine, opium, OxyContin and Percocet (oxycodone), Vicodin and other medications with hydrocodone (These were reclassified in 2014 in the Schedule II category regardless of the amount of hydrocodone they contain.)Schedule III: buprenorphine products, such as Buprenex, Suboxone, Subutex, and Temgesic
Schedule IV: tramadol
Schedule V: some preparations with codeine, such as Robitussin AC

Regulation

Almost half of the states in the U.S. and the District of Columbia currently have regulated mandatory three to seven day limits bounding the amount of opioids that a doctor can prescribe a patient.

How it Works

Concerns

Long-term

Addiction: Opioids can make your brain and body believe the drug is necessary for survival. Overdose and death.

Short-term

Shallow breathing
Slowed heart rate
Loss of consciousness

Opioids attach themselves to opiate-sensitive nerve cells that produce the same chemical that creates pleasure for performing survival tasks, like eating. Opioids can relieve pain, induce slow breathing, increase pleasure and relaxation, and reduce coughing.

Opioids attach to proteins called opioid receptors on nerve cells in the brain, spinal cord, gut and other parts of the body. When this happens, the opioids block pain messages sent from the body through the spinal cord to the brain.

Effects

Sleepiness
Constipation
Nausea

Routes of administration

Oral Route. Generally, the oral route is the preferred route of administration. ...
Enteral Tubes. Nasogastric (NG), percutaneous endoscopically placed gastrostomy (PEG) tubes, and jejunal (J) tubes, if already present, may also be used for drug delivery. ...
Transdermal Route. ...
Transmucosal. ...
Aerosol.

Marijuana

Common Forms

Hemp Plant

dried, shredded leaves, stems, seeds, and flowers

Hashish

Resins

Wax

Oils, sprays, tinctures

How it's used

vape

Smoked

Edibles

Subtopic

Tinctures, oils, sprays

Classification

Depressant

Slows down messages that travel between the body and brain

Stimulent

Enhances mood and treats depression symptoms

Regulation

It is regulated in the criminal justice system

Many states have deregulated marijuana and have made it legal for either or both recreational and/or medical use

How it works

Contain delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), the main active chemical, as well as more than 500 other chemicals.

Functions as neurotransmitters because they send chemical messages between nerve cells (neurons) throughout the nervous system. They affect brain areas that influence pleasure, memory, thinking, concentration, movement, coordination, and sensory and time perception.

Effects

Activates the brain’s reward system, which includes regions that govern the response to healthy pleasurable behaviors such as sex and eating.

The flood of dopamine contributes to the "high" that those who use recreational marijuana seek.

Dependence

Can cause irritability, feeling restless, craving marijuana, having less of an appetite, moodiness, trouble sleeping

Addiction

Can't stop using it, despite the problems it may cause

Concerns

A person’s risk of heart attack during the first hour after smoking marijuana is nearly five times his or her usual risk.

Marijuana may also cause orthostatic hypotension

increased risk for an aggressive form of testicular cancer

Routes of Administration

Smoking

Vaping

Oral through edibles

Hallucinogen

Hallucinations, delusions and a loss of the sense of personal identity

Methamphetamines

Common Forms

Crystal

smoked, injected

Powder

snorted, injected, swallowed

Pills

swallowed, injected

Classification

Schedule II stimulent

Regulation

n 1971, Congress passed the Comprehensive Drug Abuse Prevention and Control Act, which classified amphetamine and methamphetamine as Schedule II drugs, the most restricted category for prescription drugs.

How it works

Methamphetamine is able to fool neurons into taking it up just like they would dopamine. Once inside a neuron, Methamphetamine causes that neuron to release lots of dopamine. All this dopamine causes the person to feel an extra sense of pleasure that can last all day.

Effects

Methamphetamine increases activity, decreases appetite and causes a general sense of well-being. Amphetamine has been used for weight control, for athletic performance and endurance, for treating mild depression

Concerns

Long-term

Three years after long-time Methamphetamine users had quit using the drug, their dopamine neurons were still damaged. Scientists don't know yet whether this damage is permanent, but research shows that changes in the brain from Methamphetamine use can last a long time.

Short-term

Even small amounts of Methamphetamine can cause a person to be more awake and active, lose their appetite, and become irritable and aggressive. Methamphetamine also causes a person's blood pressure to increase and their heart to beat faster.

Route of Administration

Methamphetamine can be swallowed, snorted, smoked and injected by users. The effects usually last from four to eight hours or more, depending on dosage.

Caffeine

How it works

Blocks Brain Adenosine

Regulation

Mostly Self-Regulated

Effects

Elevated risk of panic attack due to irregular heart rhythm

Hormonal Changes

Increased Blood Pressure

Insomnia

Routes of Administration

Orally

Suppository

Common Forms

Pills

Liquid

Classification

Central Nervous System Stimulant

Concern

Addiction

Increased Health Concerns

How it is Used

Typically Ingested

Energy

Alertness

how it's used

how it's used

How it's used

Tobacco

Common Form

Cigarettes

Dissolvable Products

Electrical Cigarettes

Waterpipes

How its Used

Smoke

Sniff

Chew

Classification

Nicotine

Regulation

Marketing

Manufacturing

Sale of Tobacco Products

How it Works

By inhaling tobacco, the average smoker takes in 1-2 milligrams of nicotine per Cigarettes

Contains 7,000 chemicals

Effects

Lung cancer

Asthma

Concerns

Lung disease

Damage to airway and air sac

COPD

Emphysama

Chronic Bronchitas

Routes of Administrations

smoked, chewe, sniffed

Inhalants-Aerosols

Common forms

Spray paint

Deodorant

Hairspray

vegetable oil spray

Fabric protector spray

How it's used

The term "inhalants" is used to describe a variety of substances whose main common characteristic is that they are rarely, if ever, taken by any route other than inhalation.

With huffing, a rag or washcloth is soaked with an aerosol inhalant product and then pressed to the mouth to be breathed in. ... Aerosol sprays can also be sprayed into the air and then snorted or sniffed into the nose, or sprayed into a paper or plastic bag before inhaling the fumes, practice termed bagging.

Classification

Depressants

Regulation

Inhalants are not regulated under the Controlled Substances Act, thirty-eight states in the US have placed restrictions on the sale and distribution to minors of certain products that are commonly abused as inhalants.

How it works

Nearly all abused inhalants (other than nitrites) produce a pleasurable effect by depressing the central nervous system. Nitrites, in contrast, dilate and relax blood vessels rather than act as anesthetic agents.

Effects

Slurred speech
Drunk, dizzy or dazed appearance
Inability to coordinate movement
Hallucinations and delusions
Hostility
Apathy
Impaired judgment

Concerns

Long-term

The neurotoxic effects of prolonged inhalant abuse include neurological syndromes that reflect damage to parts of the brain involved in controlling cognition, movement, vision, and hearing. Cognitive abnormalities can range from mild impairment to severe dementia.

Short-term

Can cause belligerence, apathy, impaired judgment, and impaired functioning in work or social situations; nausea and vomiting. Inhalant abusers may experience dizziness, drowsiness, slurred speech, lethargy, depressed reflexes, general muscle weakness, and stupor. Also can cause headache, euphoria, giddy feelings, and the inability to coordinate movements.

Subtopic

Routes of Administration

sniffing" or "snorting" fumes from containers;
spraying aerosols directly into the nose or mouth;
"bagging" — sniffing or inhaling fumes from substances sprayed or deposited inside a plastic or paper bag;
"huffing" from an inhalant-soaked rag stuffed in the mouth; and
inhaling from balloons filled with nitrous oxide.

Psychedelics

Common forms

LSD (lysergic acid diethylamide);
PCP (phencyclidine);
magic mushrooms (psilocybin);
ketamine;
mescaline (peyote cactus);
morning glory seeds;
datura.

How it's used

Psychedelics have been used by people in many cultures for religious rituals, by artists to spark creativity or for recreation. The reasons people try hallucinogens are varied, but for most, they alter perception, thoughts, and feelings.

Regulation

How it Works

Psychedelics are a class of drug whose primary action is to trigger psychedelic experiences via serotonin receptor agonism, causing thought and visual/auditory changes, and altered state of consciousness.

Effects

Hallucinogens alter the perceptions of users by acting on neural circuits in the brain, particularly in the prefrontal cortex, a region of the brain involved in perception, mood, and cognition.

Concerns

Long-term

Psychedelic drugs could cause an increase in neuron branches, dendritic spines and synapses. Visual disturbances
Disorganized thinking
Paranoia
Mood disturbances

Short-term

Increased heart rate.
Increased blood pressure.
Heart failure.
Abnormal, rapid breathing.
Lung failure.
Changed emotional feelings.
Confusion.
Disorientation.

Routes of administration

Oral,injection, inhalation,transcutaneous,sublingual

Classification

Disassociatives

Empathogens

Serotonergic

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