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Chapter 8 Narcotics

Goldberg Chapter 8

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Page 1: Goldberg Chapter 8

Chapter 8 Narcotics

Page 2: Goldberg Chapter 8

Attendance Question

A. Enter Answer Text

Enter A

nswer T

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0%

Page 3: Goldberg Chapter 8

Warm up

• What have you heard about narcotics?

• What do you want to learn about this class of drugs?

• http://ezproxy.wwcc.edu:2048/login?url=http://digital.films.com/PortalPlaylists.aspx?aid=7539&xtid=45461

Page 4: Goldberg Chapter 8

Terms

• Narcotic

• An opium-based central nervous system depressant used to relieve pain and diarrhea

• Opiate

• A class of drugs derived from opium

• Opioid

• Drugs with characteristics similar to those of opium

• Laudanum, a mixture of opium and alcohol, was developed in the 1500s by Paracelsus

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History

• The hypodermic needle hastened the effects of morphine

• Ironically, the drug promoted to help people overcome morphine dependency was heroin

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History

• By 1906, opium and its derivatives were found in more than 50,000 medicines

• By the late 1800s, an estimated 4.59 per 1,000 people were dependent on opiates

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History• The Harrison Act of 1914 made

narcotic use without a prescription illegal

• The typical opiate addict shifted from a middle-class woman to a young, lower-class man

• Perceptions of the opiate addict went from unfortunate victim to a deviant criminal who was a threat to society

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Do you know someone who has used narcotics recreationally in the last 30 days?

A. No

B. Yes, one person

C. Yes, more than one person

No

Yes, one p

erson

Yes, m

ore th

an one p

erson

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Response

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Self-reporting

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Extent of Narcotic Use

• 68% of heroin addicts admitted into treatment are male, 59% are White, and ¾ have been in treatment previously

• Increase in abuse is significantly higher in rural areas than in metropolitan areas

• During the Vietnam War, 10-15% of US troops were addicted to heroin

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• During the 1930s, morphine abuse exceeded heroin abuse –by the 1940s, heroin addiction was greater

• Heroin use increased greatly beginning in the late 1960s and early 1970s.

• In 2010, about 200,000 Americans had used heroin in the previous month

• In the US, more than 800,000 people are addicted to heroin and other narcotics

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Worldwide Comparison

• More than 15 million people worldwide illegally use opium, morphine, and heroin

• China is believed to have the largest number of narcotic addicts

• An estimated 24 million to 34 million people throughout the world use opium

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Opium• Poppy grows throughout Asia and

the Middle East

• Seedpod is scraped, milky sap is collected and dried to a brown resin (opium)

• There is a ten-day window in which opium can be extracted

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Illicit Opium Production

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Illicit Opium Production

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Opium Poppies in Afghanistan

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Morphine• In 1803, Friedrich Serturner of Germany

synthesized morphine from opium and called it morphium

• Morphine is about ten times more potent than opium, although physicians thought it was safer and purer

• Codeine was isolated from opium 30 years later

• How morphine is administered and its dosage has a bearing on its effectiveness

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Heroin

• Heroin (diacetylmorphine) was first synthesized from morphine in 1874

• When heroin was introduced, it was believed not to be addicting

• When smoked, its effects are rapid – it is ineffective when ingested

• Heroin is three to ten times more powerful than morphine because it is more lipid-soluble

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Derived from opium

A. Enter Answer Text

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nswer T

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100%

Response

Page 20: Goldberg Chapter 8

Synthetic Opiates

• Fentanyl (Sublimaze)

• Synthetic narcotic 1,000 times more potent than heroin

• Greater risk of a fatal overdose than heroin

• China white

• Synthetic analgesic drug derived from fentanyl that mimics heroin but is considerably more potent

• Meperidine

• Synthetic derivative of morphine widely used as an analgesic –less potent than morphine

Page 21: Goldberg Chapter 8

Synthetic Opiates• Propoxyphene hydrochloride (Darvon)

• Mild narcotic that has the potential to cause dependence

• Methadone

• Drug given to heroin addicts to block withdrawal effects and euphoria

• Oxycodone (Percodan)

Page 22: Goldberg Chapter 8

OxyContin

• OxyContin is a particularly strong painkiller that blocks the pain signals from nerves

• Thousands have become addicted to it – the number of addicted babies has doubled or tripled over the past decade

• The manufacturer, Purdue Pharma, admits that dozens to hundreds of people have died from it

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Dosages (add oxy)

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Brain

• Mouse Party

• Opiates mimic endorphins in the brain

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Physical Effects

• Drowsiness (nodding out), vomiting, nausea, and difficulty concentrating

• Euphoria

• Gradually anesthetizing sensations

• Lethargy and sleep

• Difficulty urinating, constipation

• Difficulty achieving an erection

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Emotional Effects

• Relief from anxiety, hostility, feelings of inadequacy, and aggression

• Difficulty regulating inhibitions and frequently make risky decisions

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Social Effects

• Alienated from and hostile toward friends and family

• Correlated with criminal behavior, unemployment, and violence

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NEPs retard the spread of HIV/AIDS

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Needle-Exchange Programs• IV drug use increases HIV, hepatitis

risk

• Health care personnel favor NEPs

• 5.9% decrease in HIV infection rates in cities with NEPs

• Congress banned federal funding for NEPs in 1988

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Dependency

• Physical and psychological dependence, and tolerance develop quickly• Positive reinforcement

• Negative reinforcement

• Withdrawal symptoms can be severe

Page 31: Goldberg Chapter 8

Withdrawal

Hours after last dose Signs Heroin or

Morphine

Methadone

Craving for drugs, anxiety 6 24

Yawning, perspiration, running nose, teary eyes 14 34-48

Increase in above signs plus pupil dilation, goose bumps,

tremors, hot and cold flashes, aching bones and

muscles, loss of appetite

16 48-72

Increased intensity of above, plus insomnia; raised blood

pressure; increased temperature, pulse rate, respiratory

rate and depth; restlessness; nausea24-36

Increased intensity of above, plus curled-up position,

vomiting, diarrhea, weight loss, spontaneous ejaculation

or orgasm, hemoconcentration, increased blood sugar

36-48

Page 32: Goldberg Chapter 8

A Day in the Life

Page 33: Goldberg Chapter 8

Dependency

• Factors affecting the difficulty of withdrawal:

• Social support network

• Desire to stop

• Physical environment during withdrawal

• Alternative opiates

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Dependency

• About half of narcotic abusers become dependent:

• Can develop in less than two weeks if they take increasing amounts of narcotics

• Average addiction is six to eight years (aging out)

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Toxicity

• Respiratory depression can be fatal

• Synergistic effect when combined with depressants

• Opioid Triad• Coma

• Depressed respiration

• Pinpoint pupils

• Death from an overdose of heroin is slow – people who die quickly are likely to die from anaphylactic shock

Page 36: Goldberg Chapter 8

Toxicity (risks)

• According to the CDC, painkillers kill twice as many people as cocaine and five times more people than heroin

• Increased risk of blood-borne disease and infections

• Physical problems frequently result from using narcotics in unclean, unsafe environments

• Sharing needles is a major risk for HIV infection

• Narcotics often are contaminated with other drugs, sugar, starch, powdered milk, quinine, or strychnine

Page 37: Goldberg Chapter 8

Medical Benefits

• Analgesic• Patients receiving morphine are aware of pain, but their

perception and response are altered in positive ways

• Gastrointestinal difficulties• In less-developed countries, narcotics treat diarrhea that is a

major cause of death among the young and elderly

• Cough suppressant (antitussive)• Narcotics slow activity of the cough control center

• Nonopiate dextromethorphan is chemically similar

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Treatment and Support Groups

• The recidivism (relapse) rate for narcotic addiction is high

• Gradual detoxification - 10 to 14 days on an inpatient basis

• Rapid detoxification

Page 39: Goldberg Chapter 8

Narcotic Antagonists

• Drugs that block narcotics from producing their reinforcing effects are called antagonists

• They remove the physical need for opiates, but not the psychic need

• Examples are (Suboxone) naltrexone, buprenorphine, nalorphine, naloxone, and cyclazocine

Page 40: Goldberg Chapter 8

Methadone –Narcotics Agonists

• Since 1960, methadone has been the drug used most frequently to treat heroin addiction

• Methadone is highly specific to opiate addiction

• Methadone use leads to addiction, though many people consider it preferable to heroin addiction

• Methadone has to be administered daily to avert withdrawal symptoms

Page 41: Goldberg Chapter 8

Common Narcotics

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Perceptions of Narcotics

• Narcotics were advertised as a cure for addiction to tobacco

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Extent of Narcotic Use

• Controlled users (chippers) fit the following pattern:

• Seldom used the drug more than once a day

• Could keep opiates around without using them

• Avoided opiates when addicts were present

• Did not use opiates to alleviate depression

• Seldom binged on opiates

• Knew the opiate source or dealer

• Took opiates for recreation or relaxation

• Did not take opiates to escape life’s daily hassles