PSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY

sīˌkōfärˌməkŏlˈəjē, in its broadest sense, the study of all pharmacological agents that affect mental and emotional functions. The term is usually applied more specifically to the study and synthesis of drugs used in the control of psychiatric illnesses, namely the antipsychotic, antianxiety, antidepressant, and antimanic medications. The widespread use of drugs among individuals suffering from mental illness is a relatively recent phenomenon, developing since the 1950s.

Antipsychotic Drugs

Antipsychotic drugs can ameliorate the types of delusions and hallucinations characteristic of bipolar disorder (see depression) and schizophrenia. The first drug of this type was reserpine, whose use dates from ancient Hindu medicine but whose reintroduction as an antipsychotic agent in 1954 marked the beginning of the large-scale use of antipsychotic drugs. Because of side effects, including depression, reserpine has been supplanted by phenothiazine drugs. The phenothiazine chlorpromazine (Thorazine) was the first to be widely applied to mental disorders and remains one of the standard drugs. Drugs of the phenothiazine family are most useful in the treatment of schizophrenia. They are thought to act in part by blocking dopamine receptors at the synapse, reducing brain activity. The phenothiazines and clozapine have been credited with a revolutionary transformation of mental health care, enabling increasing numbers of psychotic persons to function outside the hospital. Antipsychotic drugs may have negative side effects, such as the dulling of physical and mental functioning, tardive dyskinesia, and sedation.

Antianxiety Drugs

Antianxiety drugs, including the propanediol meprobamate (Miltown or Equanil), and the more recent benzodiazephines—such as diazepam (Valium)—have found wide use in reducing tension and anxiety among individuals with less serious mental disorders, but may lead to addiction if abused. Although they form a chemically diverse group, the physiological effects of each are similar; in small doses they relieve anxiety by reducing muscular tension, and in larger doses they produce sedation, sleep, and anesthesia (see depressant). Antianxiety drugs are the most frequently prescribed pharmaceuticals in the United States.

Antidepressants

Antidepressants appeared in the late 1950s, and have been used in the treatment of individuals suffering from major depression or the depression phase of bipolar disorder. Antidepressants include the tricyclics and monoamine oxidase (MAO) inhibitors. These drugs have the effect of increasing the concentration in the nervous system of catecholamines such as epinephrine. The toxic effects of the MAO inhibitors have been largely overcome in recent years, and the drugs are still used in many instances. They have been supplanted in many uses, however, by tricyclic compounds, such as amitriptyline (Elavil), and the newer serotonin increasers, such as fluoxetine (Prozac) and sertraline HCL (Zoloft). Tricyclics are chemically similar to phenothiazines, but that activate rather than tranquilize (see stimulant). The choice of an antidepressant often has more to do with its side effects than efficacy.

Antimanic and Hallucinogenic Drugs

The element lithium, in the form lithium carbonate, has been widely used as an antimanic in cases of bipolar disorder (manic-depression), particularly to control manic episodes. Lithium alters the transport of sodium ions in nerve and muscle cells and affects the metabolism of catecholamines; the exact mechanism of action is unknown. The hallucinogenic drugs, such as mescaline and LSD, have been of research interest because they often mimic natural psychotic states.

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Psychopharmacology  - 1070 results

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Psychopharmacology: Basic Mechanisms and Applied Interventions Master Lectures in Psychology Psychopharmacology: Basic Mechanisms and Applied Interventions...Psychotherapy Research and Behavior Change Psychopharmacology: Basic Mechanisms and Applied Interventions...
Clinical Psychopharmacology A Primer Clinical Psychopharmacology A Primer Paul F. Smith Cynthia...Paul F. Paul Frederick , 1960Clinical psychopharmacology : a primer / Paul F. Smith , Cynthia...
...Mind Chemicals for the Mind Psychopharmacology and Human Consciousness Ernest...1937-- Chemicals for the mind: psychopharmacology and human consciousness / Ernest...been fascinated by the topic of psychopharmacology--the practice of treating individuals...
...Mind Chemicals for the Mind Psychopharmacology and Human Consciousness Ernest...Ernest, 1937 Chemicals for the mind: psychopharmacology and human consciousness / Ernest...been fascinated by the topic of psychopharmacology the practice of treating individuals...
...Dourish Eds. , Experimental psychopharmacology, concepts and methods pp. 393...H. Snyder Eds. , Handbook of psychopharmacology Vol. 18, pp. 129-190 . New York...indices and effects of drugs". Psychopharmacology , 97, 202-205. Laties, V. G...
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journal articles on: Psychopharmacology  - 1019 results

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Psychopharmacology Training and Canadian Counsellors: Are We Getting...counsellors reported that they were required to take psychopharmacology training as a part of their masters and/or doctoral...to now, similar data on the extent and type of psychopharmacology training Canadian counsellors have received have...
...Advancing Social Work Curriculum in Psychopharmacology and Medication Management. by...didactic content on the topic of psychopharmacology needs to be more routinely included...curriculum suggestions to enhance psychopharmacology content in BSW and MSW social work...
Teaching a Psychopharmacology Course to Counselors: Justification...sophisticated knowledge about psychopharmacology to work effectively in school...effective instruction in psychopharmacology for counselors. During...
Psychopharmacology and aggression: II. A meta-analysis of nonstimulant...with children Special issue on pharmacotherapy. Psychopharmacology Bulletin, 9, 24-84. (ChPRS; CTPS; PTQ) Connor...1985). Clinical Global Impression Scale-NIMH. Psychopharmacology Bulletin, 21, 839-844. (ODD-CGI) Overall, J...
The Other Side of Psychopharmacology: A Review of the Literature. by...disconfirming literature regarding psychopharmacology use. Comparing the first review of psychopharmacology published in the counseling field two...
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magazine articles on: Psychopharmacology  - 86 results

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...programs in the "clinical neurobiology, psychopharmacology, etiology, genetics, and neuroen-docrinology...epidemiology," and one-dimensional "psychopharmacology"? Barry Nurcombe, director of child...psychiatric diagnosis prognosis and psychopharmacology? How long will it take managed care...
...function "in the family, work, school, or community activities." That coverage could include treatment by psychotherapy or psychopharmacology (treatment by mind-alerting drugs). Mental-health advocates like Ira Magaziner and Tipper Gore point to the latter as...
...supportive professionals, these RYAs are often unprepared to function independently outside their old cocoons. Even the psychopharmacology revolution may have increased the numbers of RYAs. Many children and adolescents have undoubtedly been helped by psychotropic...
...although the researchers were intrigued that a few people did have that response. Griffiths study, published in the August Psychopharmacology, combines research on psychedelic-drug effects--which have received little attention in the past 40 years--with a burgeoning...
Media Watch; No Shades of Gray by Jim Naughton When psychotherapy or psychopharmacology end up in the news, it is frequently due to violent death. Look, for instance, at the three biggest mental health stories of...
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newspaper articles on: Psychopharmacology  - 39 results

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...David Healys. "The Creation of Psychopharmacology." One of the founding historians of psychopharmacology (the use of medication in the...that further developments in psychopharmacology are likely to follow the trajectory...
...because they were over-prescribed in the past, a North-East expert said yesterday. Heather Ashton, emeritus professor of psychopharmacology at Newcastle University and head of a clinic treating users of the group of drugs called benzodiazepines from 1982 to...
...Nutts article in the latest edition of the Journal of Psychopharmacology is entitled "Equasy - An overlooked addiction with implications...article by Professor David Nutt published in the Journal of Psychopharmacology was done in respect of his academic work and not as chair...
...advisor for, er, offering advice on drugs. eas Lost in a world of who knows where, Al wasnt going to let an expert in the psychopharmacology of addiction, especially one called Nutt, suggest that government policy on drugs was muddled, fuddled, raddled or frazzled...
...psychotic illness and was less damaging to health than nicotine or alcohol. Last night, the University of Bristol professor of psychopharmacology revealed some of his children - he has two sons and two daughters, aged 18 to 26 - had taken soft drugs before and that...
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encyclopedia articles on: Psychopharmacology  - 6 results

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PSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY si kofar m kol je, in its broadest sense, the study of all pharmacological agents that affect mental and emotional functions...
...groups of drugs chemically similar to antihistamines and phenothiazines also act as mild psychic stimulants (see psychopharmacology ). Cocaine , besides its effect as a local anesthetic, also stimulates the central nervous system, producing excitement...
...the phenothiazines , meprobamate , certain muscle relaxants and anticonvulsants, and lithium carbonate. See also psychopharmacology . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press...
...nervous system, including analgesics , narcotics , amphetamines , and barbiturates (see also anesthesia ; psychopharmacology ; hallucinogenic drug ). See also drug resistance ; drug poisoning ; drug addiction and drug abuse . Sources...
...smacking and abnormal postures. It occurs in patients who have been given the drug for long periods of time. See also psychopharmacology . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press...
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