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Definição e significado de Stimulant

Definição

stimulant (n.)

1.anything that tends to arouse"his approval was an added fillip"

2.a drug that temporarily quickens some vital process

3.any stimulating information or event; acts to arouse action

stimulant (adj.)

1.that stimulates"stimulant phenomena"

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Merriam Webster

StimulantStim"u*lant (?), a. [L. stimulans, p. pr.; cf. F. stimulant. See Stimulate.]
1. Serving to stimulate.

2. (Physiol.) Produced increased vital action in the organism, or in any of its parts.

StimulantStim"u*lant, n. [Cf. F. stimulant.]
1. That which stimulates, provokes, or excites.

His feelings had been exasperated by the constant application of stimulants. Macaulay.

2. (Physiol. & Med.) An agent which produces a temporary increase of vital activity in the organism, or in any of its parts; -- sometimes used without qualification to signify an alcoholic beverage used as a stimulant.

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stimulant (n.)


Wikipedia

Stimulant

                   
  Ritalin Slow-Release (SR) 20 mg tablets.

Stimulants (also referred to as psychostimulants) are psychoactive drugs which induce temporary improvements in either mental or physical function or both. Examples of these kinds of effects may include enhanced alertness, wakefulness, and locomotion, among others. Due to their effects typically having an "up" quality to them, stimulants are also occasionally referred to as "uppers". Depressants or "downers", which decrease mental and/or physical function, are in stark contrast to stimulants and are considered to be their functional opposites. Stimulants are widely used throughout the world as prescription medicines and as illicit substances of recreational use or abuse.

Contents

  Effects

Stimulants produce a variety of different kinds of effects by enhancing the activity of the central and peripheral nervous systems. Common effects, which vary depending on the substance in question, may include enhanced alertness, awareness, wakefulness, endurance, productivity, and motivation, increased arousal, locomotion, heart rate, and blood pressure, and the perception of a diminished requirement for food and sleep. Many stimulants are also capable of improving mood and relieving anxiety, and some can even induce feelings of euphoria. It should be noted, however, that many of these drugs are also capable of causing anxiety and heart failure, even the ones that may paradoxically reduce it to a degree at the same time. Stimulants exert their effects through a number of different pharmacological mechanisms, the most prominent of which include facilitation of norepinephrine (noradrenaline) and/or dopamine activity (e.g., via monoamine transporter inhibition or reversal[1]), adenosine receptor antagonism, and nicotinic acetylcholine receptor agonism.

  Indications

Stimulants are used both individually and clinically for therapeutic purposes in the treatment of a number of indications, including the following:

  • To counteract lethargy and fatigue throughout the day while at work or while doing other activities.
  • To reduce sleepiness and to keep the person awake when necessary, as well as to treat narcolepsy.
  • To decrease appetite and promote weight loss, as well as to treat obesity.
  • To improve concentration and focus while at work or school, especially for those with attentional disorders such as ADHD.
  • Occasionally, they are also used off label to treat clinical depression, more particularly, non-typical depression and treatment-resistant depression.

  Types

  Xanthines

  Theobromine

  Theophylline

  Caffeine

  Roasted coffee beans, a common source of caffeine.

Caffeine is a mild stimulant compound that is found naturally in coffee, tea, and to a lesser degree, in cocoa or chocolate. It is included in many soft drinks, as well as a larger amount in energy drinks. Caffeine is the world's most widely used psychoactive drug and by far the most common stimulant. The vast majority (over 85%) of people in the United States consume caffeine on a daily basis. Few jurisdictions restrict its sale and use. Caffeine is also included in some medications, usually for the purpose of enhancing the effect of the primary ingredient, or reducing one of its side effects (especially drowsiness). Tablets containing standardized doses of caffeine are also widely available.

  Nicotine

Nicotine is the active chemical constituent in tobacco, which is available in many forms, including cigarettes, cigars, chewing tobacco, and smoking cessation aids such as nicotine patches, nicotine gum and electronic cigarettes. Nicotine is used widely throughout the world for its stimulating effects.

  Amphetamines

  A chart comparing the chemical structures of different amphetamine derivatives

Amphetamines are a group of phenylethylamine stimulants such as amphetamine and methamphetamine. Like NDRIs, amphetamine increases the levels of norepinephrine and dopamine in the brain via reuptake inhibition; however, the more important mechanism by which amphetamines cause stimulation is through the direct release of these catecholamines from storage vesicles in cells. Amphetamines are known to cause elevated mood and euphoria as well as rebound depression and anxiety.[2]

Amphetamines are often used for their therapeutic effects; physicians occasionally prescribe amphetamines to treat major depression, where subjects do not respond well to traditional SSRI medications, and numerous studies have demonstrated the effectiveness of drugs such as Adderall in controlling symptoms associated with ADD/ADHD. Due to their availability and fast-acting effects, amphetamines are prime candidates for abuse.[3]

  MDMA ("Ecstasy")

  Illicit tablets containing MDMA

Methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA), known by its common street name "Ecstasy", is an illicit substance that typically comes in either tablet, capsule, or powder/crystal form. It had a medical application as a treatment for depression until 1985 when the DEA placed MDMA into schedule 1, prohibiting most medical studies and applications. Notably, MDMA is also unique and very popular for its entactogenic properties. The stimulant effects of MDMA include hypertension, anorexia (appetite loss), euphoria, social disinhibition, insomnia (or enhanced wakefulness), improved energy, increased arousal, and increased perspiration, among others.

  Cocaine

Cocaine is made from the leaves of the coca shrub, which grows in the mountain regions of South American countries such as Bolivia, Colombia, and Peru. In Europe, North America, and in some parts of Asia, the most common form of cocaine is a white crystalline powder. Cocaine is a stimulant but is not normally prescribed therapeutically for its stimulant properties, although it sees clinical use as a local anesthetic, particularly in ophthalmology. Most cocaine use is recreational and its abuse potential is high, and so its sale and possession are strictly controlled in most jurisdictions. Other tropane derivative drugs related to cocaine are also known such as troparil and lometopane but have not been widely sold or used recreationally.[4]

  NRIs & NDRIs

These drugs inhibit the reuptake of norepinephrine and/or dopamine, resulting in increased extracellular levels and therefore enhanced neurotransmission, ultimately producing a stimulant effect. Many of these compounds are used as ADHD medications and antidepressants. The best-known NDRI is bupropion (Wellbutrin, Zyban), and the two best-known NRIs are atomoxetine (Strattera) and reboxetine (Edronax). Many of these drugs have a considerably lower abuse potential in comparison to other stimulants like the amphetamines and cocaine.

  Methylphenidate

Methylphenidate (MPH; Ritalin, Concerta, Metadate, or Methylin) is a drug approved for treatment of attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder, postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome, and narcolepsy. It belongs to the piperidine class of compounds and increases the levels of dopamine and norepinephrine in the brain through reuptake inhibition of the monoamine transporters. It also increases the release of dopamine and norepinephrine. MPH possesses structural similarities to amphetamine, and, though it is less potent, its pharmacological effects are even more closely related to those of cocaine.[5][6][7]

  Modafinil, Adrafinil, and Armodafinil

Modafinil (Provigil/Alertec/Modavigil) is an analeptic drug approved by the (FDA) for the treatment of narcolepsy, shift work sleep disorder, and excessive daytime sleepiness associated with obstructive sleep apnea.

Modafinil, like other stimulants, increases the release of monoamines but also elevates hypothalamic histamine levels, leading some researchers to consider Modafinil a "wakefulness promoting agent" rather than a classic amphetamine-like stimulant.

Modafinil has been shown to be effective in the treatment of Attention-Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD), depression, cocaine addiction, Parkinson's Disease, schizophrenia, shift workers' sleep disorder and disease-related fatigue.

Adrafinil is the prodrug of Modafinil, and is metabolized into it in about one hour, when taken on an empty stomach.

Armodafinil is a new version of Modafinil.

  Ampakines

Recently, there have been improvements in the area of stimulant pharmacology, producing a class of chemicals known as ampakines, or eugeroics, (good arousal). These stimulants tend to increase alertness without the peripheral (body) effects or addiction/tolerance/abuse potential of the traditional stimulants. They have minimal effect on sleep structure, and do not cause rebound hypersomnolence or "come down" effects. Ampakines such as ampalex and CX717 have been developed but are still in clinical trials and have not yet been sold commercially. Another compound with similar effects to these drugs is carphedon, which is sold as a general stimulant in Russia under the brand name Phenotropil.

  Yohimbine

Yohimbine is a psychoactive drug of the tryptamine chemical class with stimulant and aphrodisiac effects. Yohimbine is sometimes used to remedy Type-2 Diabetes in animals and humans that carry the polymorphisms of the α2A-adrenergic receptor gene.[8]

  Abuse

Abuse of central nervous system stimulants is common. Addiction to some CNS stimulants can quickly lead to medical, psychiatric and psychosocial deterioration. Drug tolerance, dependence, sensitization as well as a withdrawal syndrome can occur.[9]

  Testing

The presence of stimulants in the body may be tested by a variety of procedures. Serum and urine are the common sources of testing material although saliva is sometimes used. Commonly used tests include chromatography, immunologic assay and mass spectrometry.[10] Patients taking ADHD-prescribed, Adderall-type amphetamine compounds are commonly surprised upon being tested as "positive" for "meth", or methamphetamine (Desoxyn its licit, FDA-licensed, medicinal form) in forensically unsophisticated urinalysis, as methamphetamine is the activee ingredient of the drug.

  See also

  References

  1. ^ Riddle EL, Fleckenstein AE, Hanson GR (2005). "Role of monoamine transporters in mediating psychostimulant effects". The AAPS journal 7 (4): E847–51. DOI:10.1208/aapsj070481. PMC 2750953. PMID 16594636. //www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?tool=pmcentrez&artid=2750953. 
  2. ^ P Knapp (1952). "Amphetamine and addiction". Journal of Nervous and Mental Disorders 115: 406–409. 
  3. ^ Efforts of the National Institute on Drug Abuse to Prevent and Treat Prescription Drug Abuse, Testimony Before the Subcommittee on Criminal Justice, Drug Policy, and Human Resources Committee on Government Reform, United States House of Representatives, July 26, 2006
  4. ^ AJ Giannini, WC Price (1986). "Contemporary drugs of abuse". American Family Physician 33: 207–213. 
  5. ^ "Ritalin & Cocaine: The Connection and the Controversy"
  6. ^ "Psychiatric nursing: contemporary practice"
  7. ^ "Why isn't methylphenidate more addictive?"[dead link]
  8. ^ Rosengren, A. H.; Jokubka, R.; Tojjar, D.; Granhall, C.; Hansson, O.; Li, D.-Q.; Nagaraj, V.; Reinbothe, T. M. et al. (2009). "Overexpression of Alpha2A-Adrenergic Receptors Contributes to Type 2 Diabetes". Science 327 (5962): 217–20. DOI:10.1126/science.1176827. PMID 19965390. 
  9. ^ Dackis CA, Gold MS (1990). "Addictiveness of central stimulants". Adv Alcohol Subst Abuse 9 (1–2): 9–26. DOI:10.1300/J251v09n01_02. PMID 1974121. 
  10. ^ AJ Giannini. Drug Abuse. Los Angeles, Health Information Press, 1999, pp.203-208

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