Psychoactive drug

A psychoactive drug or psychotropic substance is a chemical that alters brain function, resulting in temporary changes in perception, mood, consciousness, or behaviour. Such drugs are often used for recreational and spiritual purposes, as well as in medicine, especially for treating neurological and psychological illnesses.

Contents

Psychoactive drug chart

ANTIPSYCHOTICS
Major Tranquilizers

Atypical antipsychotics       Typical antipsychotics

STIMULANTS   Seroquel   Zyprexa Haldol   Thorazine DEPRESSANTS
Psychomotor Stimulants

  Amphetamines   Khat
  Ritalin   Cocaine

Aminoketones

 Zyban   Tenuate

    SSRIs

  Paxil   Prozac
  Zoloft

Minor Tranquilizers

    Ativan   Valium
    Xanax   Rohypnol

Other Sympathomimetic amines

    Ephedrine
    Pseudoephedrine

Cholinergics
Nicotine
Betel nut
Muscarine
Other Sedative Hypnotics

    Alcohol         Ether   Chloral hydrate
    Barbituates   GHB    Chloroform
    Quaalude

    Methylxanthines

    Caffeine
    Theobromine
    Theophylline

  Psychedelics

    MDMA
    Mescaline
    DOM
    LSD
    Psilocybin

Cannabis Dissociatives

  Ketamine
  PCP         DXM

Amanita muscaria
  Ibotenic acid
  Muscimol

Narcotic Analgesics

Opium
Codeine
Morphine
Heroin
Fentanyl

DMT Ibogaine   Nitrous oxide

  Salvinorin

Deliriants
  Dramamine
  Benadryl
  Atropine
  Scopolamine

HALLUCINOGENS

Legend

Other psychoactive drugs

Ways Psychoactive Drugs Affect The Brain

There are many ways in which psychoactive drugs can affect the brain. While some drugs affect neurons presynaptically, others act postsynpatically and some drugs don't even attack the synapse, working on neural axons instead. Here is a general breakdown of the ways psychoative drugs can work.

  1. Prevent The Action Potential From Starting
    • Lidocaine, TTX (they bind to voltage-gated sodium channels, so no action potential begins even when a generator potential passes threshold)
  2. Neurotransmitter Synthesis
    • Increase - L-Dopa, tryptophan, choline (precursors)
    • Decrease - PCPA (inhibits synthesis of 5HT)
    • Causes increased sensitivity to the five sences, due to an increasing number of signals being sent to the brain.
  3. Neurotransmitter Packaging
    • Increase - MAO Inhibitors
    • Decreasing - Resperine (pokes holes in the synaptic vesicles of catecholamines)
  4. Neurotransmitter Release
    • Increase - Black Widow Spider (Ach)
    • Decrease - Botulinum Toxin (Ach), Tetanus (GABA)
  5. Agonists - Mimick the original NTs and activate the receptors
    • Muscuraine, Nicotine (Ach)
    • AMDA, NMDA (Glu)
    • Alcohol, Benzodiazepines (GABA)
  6. Antagonists - Bind to the receptor sites and block activation
    • Atropine, Curare (Ach)
    • PCP (Glu)
  7. Prevent Ach Breakdown -
    • Insecticides, Nerve Gas
  8. Prevent Reuptake
    • Cocaine (DA), Amphetamines (E)
    • Tricyclics, SSRIs

- based on information taught in NSC 201, Vanderbilt University

Related articles

External links

See also: Psychoactive drug, 2, 5-dimethoxy-4-methylamphetamine, Acetylcholine, Alcohol, Amanita muscaria, Amphetamines, Analgesic, Antiemetic, Antiepileptic, Antipsychotics