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单词 psychopharmacology
释义

psychopharmacology


psy·cho·phar·ma·col·o·gy

P0636350 (sī′kō-fär′mə-kŏl′ə-jē)n. The branch of pharmacology that deals with the study of the actions, effects, and development of psychoactive drugs.
psy′cho·phar′ma·co·log′ic (-kə-lŏj′ĭk), psy′cho·phar′ma·co·log′i·cal (-ĭ-kəl) adj.psy′cho·phar′ma·col′o·gist n.

psychopharmacology

(ˌsaɪkəʊˌfɑːməˈkɒlədʒɪ) n1. (Pharmacology) the study of drugs that affect the mind2. (Psychology) the study of drugs that affect the mind psychopharmacological adj ˌpsychoˌpharmaˈcologist n

psy•cho•phar•ma•col•o•gy

(ˌsaɪ koʊˌfɑr məˈkɒl ə dʒi)

n. the branch of pharmacology dealing with the psychological effects of drugs. psy`cho•phar`ma•co•log′i•cal, adj.

psychopharmacology

the study of drugs that effect emotional and mental States. — psychopharmacologic, psychopharmacological, adj.See also: Psychology
the study of drugs that effect emotional and mental states. — psychopharmacologic, psychopharmacological, adj.See also: Medical Specialties
Thesaurus
Noun1.psychopharmacology - the study of drugs that affect the mindmateria medica, pharmacological medicine, pharmacology - the science or study of drugs: their preparation and properties and uses and effects
Translations

psychopharmacology


psychopharmacology

(sī'kōfär'məkŏl`əjē), 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 delusionsdelusion,
false belief based upon a misinterpretation of reality. It is not, like a hallucination, a false sensory perception, or like an illusion, a distorted perception.
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 and hallucinationshallucination,
false perception characterized by a distortion of real sensory stimuli. Common types of hallucination are auditory, i.e., hearing voices or noises and visual, i.e., seeing people that are not actually present.
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 characteristic of bipolar disorder (see depressiondepression,
in psychiatry, a symptom of mood disorder characterized by intense feelings of loss, sadness, hopelessness, failure, and rejection. The two major types of mood disorder are unipolar disorder, also called major depression, and bipolar disorder, whose sufferers are
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) and schizophreniaschizophrenia
, group of severe mental disorders characterized by reality distortions resulting in unusual thought patterns and behaviors. Because there is often little or no logical relationship between the thoughts and feelings of a person with schizophrenia, the disorder has
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. The first drug of this type was reserpinereserpine
, alkaloid isolated from the root of the snakeroot plant (Rauwolfia serpentina), a small evergreen climbing shrub of the dogbane family native to the Indian subcontinent.
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, 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 phenothiazinephenothiazine
, any one of a class of drugs used to control mental disorders. Phenothiazines, along with other antipsychotic, or neuroleptic, drugs are used for such disorders as schizophrenia, paranoia, mania, psychosis resulting from mental deficiency, some forms of senility,
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 drugs. The phenothiazine chlorpromazinechlorpromazine
, one of a group of tranquilizing drugs called phenothiazines that are useful in halting psychotic episodes. Chlorpromazine, sold under the trade name Thorazine, is often used to reduce the severe anxiety and agitation and the overactivity of some forms of schizophrenia.
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 (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 drugsantianxiety drug,
drug administered for the relief of anxiety. Although their action is not fully understood, most antianxiety medications appear to affect the action of neurotransmitters in the brain (see serotonin and norepinephrine).
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, including the propanediol meprobamatemeprobamate
, tranquilizing drug that acts as a depressant of the central nervous system and is commonly used in the treatment of anxiety and sometimes schizophrenia. Although meprobamate is chemically unlike barbiturates and has lower toxicity, it has similar pharmacological
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 (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 depressantdepressant,
any one of various substances that diminish functional activity, usually by depressing the nervous system. Barbiturates, sedatives, alcohol, and meprobamate are all depressants. Depressants have various modes of action and effects.
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). 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 catecholaminescatecholamine
, any of several compounds occurring naturally in the body that serve as hormones or as neurotransmitters in the sympathetic nervous system. The catecholamines include such compounds as epinephrine, or adrenaline, norepinephrine, and dopamine.
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 such as epinephrineepinephrine
, hormone important to the body's metabolism, also known as adrenaline. Epinephrine, a catecholamine, together with norepinephrine, is secreted principally by the medulla of the adrenal gland.
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. 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 serotoninserotonin
, organic compound that was first recognized as a powerful vasoconstrictor occurring in blood serum. It was partially purified, crystallized, and named in 1948, and its structure was deduced a year later.
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 increasers, such as fluoxetine (Prozac) and sertraline HCL (Zoloft). Tricyclics are chemically similar to phenothiazines, but that activate rather than tranquilize (see stimulantstimulant,
any substance that causes an increase in activity in various parts of the nervous system or directly increases muscle activity. Cerebral, or psychic, stimulants act on the central nervous system and provide a temporary sense of alertness and well-being as well as
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). The choice of an antidepressantantidepressant,
any of a wide range of drugs used to treat psychic depression. They are given to elevate mood, counter suicidal thoughts, and increase the effectiveness of psychotherapy.
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 often has more to do with its side effects than efficacy.

Antimanic and Hallucinogenic Drugs

The element lithiumlithium
[Gr.,=stone], metallic chemical element; symbol Li; at. no. 3; interval in which at. wt. ranges 6.938–6.997; m.p. about 180.54&degC;; b.p. about 1,342&degC;; sp. gr. .534 at 20&degC;; valence +1. Lithium is a soft, silver-white metal.
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, 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 drugshallucinogenic drug
, any of a group of substances that alter consciousness; also called psychotomimetic (i.e., mimicking psychosis), mind-expanding, or psychedelic drug.
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, such as mescaline and LSDLSD
or lysergic acid diethylamide
, alkaloid synthesized from lysergic acid, which is found in the fungus ergot (Claviceps purpurea). It is a hallucinogenic drug that intensifies sense perceptions and produces hallucinations, mood changes, and changes in the
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, have been of research interest because they often mimic natural psychotic states.

Psychopharmacology

A discipline that merges the subject matter of psychology, which studies cognition, emotion, and behavior, and pharmacology, which characterizes different drugs. Thus, psychopharmacology focuses on characterizing drugs that affect thinking, feeling, and action. In addition, psychopharmacology places particular emphasis on those drugs that affect abnormalities in thought, affect, and behavior, and thus has a relationship to psychiatry. Psychopharmacology is predominantly, but not exclusively, concerned with four major classes of drugs that are of clinical significance in controlling four major categories of psychiatric disorder: anxiety, depression, mania, and schizophrenia.

Anxiety is an emotional state that can range in intensity from mild apprehension and nervousness to intense fear and even terror. It has been estimated that 2–4% of the general population suffer from an anxiety disorder at some time. Although anxiety in some form is a common experience, it can become so intense and pervasive as to be debilitating; it may therefore require psychiatric attention and treatment with an anxiolytic drug. There are three major groups of anxiolytics. Members of the first group are called propanediols; meprobamate is the most widely used. The second group is the barbiturates, of which phenobarbital is the most generally prescribed. The third group, most frequently prescribed, is the benzodiazepines, the best known of which is diazepam.

A major advance in understanding the benzodiazepines was the identification of the cellular sites at which these drugs act (so-called benzodiazepine receptors). The distribution of these receptors in the brain has also been found to have a striking parallel to the distribution of the receptors for a naturally occurring substance called gamma-amino butyric acid (GABA). Furthermore, it is known that GABA has a ubiquitous inhibitory role in modulating brain function. Most importantly, it is now clear that benzodiazepines share a biochemical property in that all augment the activity of GABA. See Anxiety disorders, Serotonin

The symptoms of depression can include a sense of sadness, hopelessness, despair, and irritability, as well as suicidal thoughts and attempts, which are sometimes successful. In addition, physical symptoms such as loss of appetite, sleep disturbances, and psychomotor agitation are often associated with depression. When depression becomes so pervasive and intense that normal functioning is impaired, antidepressant medication may be indicated. It has been estimated that as much as 6% of the population will require antidepressant medication at some time in their lives.

There are two major groups of antidepressant drugs. Members of the first group are called heterocyclics because of their characteristic chemical structures. Members of the second group, which are less often prescribed, are called monoamine oxidase inhibitors. See Monoamine oxidase

The antidepressants typically require at least several weeks of chronic administration before they become effective in alleviating depression. This contrasts with the anxiolytics, which are effective in reducing anxiety in hours and even minutes. Another difference between these two classes of drugs is that the anxiolytics are more likely to be efficacious: anxiolytics are effective in the vast majority of nonphobic, anxious patients, whereas the antidepressants are effective in only about 65–70% of depressed patients. See Affective disorders

Manic episodes are characterized by hyperactivity, grandiosity, flight of ideas, and belligerence; affected patients appear to be euphoric, have racing thoughts, delusions of grandeur, and poor if not self-destructive judgment. Periods of depression follow these episodes of mania in the majority of patients. The cycles of this bipolar disorder are typically interspersed among periods of normality that are, in most cases, relatively protracted.

Mania can usually be managed by chronic treatment with lithium salts and can be expected to be effective in 70–80% of the individuals treated. Furthermore, the period of depression that typically follows the manic episode can usually be prevented, or at least attenuated, if lithium treatment is maintained after the manic phase has subsided. Any periods of depression that do occur can be managed by antidepressant drugs. Lithium is no longer the only drug used in the management of mania. Carbamazepine, an anticonvulsant that is used in the treatment of epilepsy, is also useful in the treatment of periods of mania.

Schizophrenia is a form of psychosis; it incorporates a broad range of symptoms that can include bizarre delusions, hallucinations, incoherence of thought processes, inappropriate affect, and grossly disorganized movements. It affects 1–2% of the population. The symptoms of schizophrenia can be controlled, in varying degrees, by a large group of drugs called antipsychotics. Symptom management requires chronic medication and can be expected in about 80% or more of the schizophrenics treated. However, management is only partially successful in that normal functioning is not completely restored in most patients.

The antipsychotics have a broad range of side effects among which are disturbances of movement that fall into two general classes. The first class includes an array of symptoms very like those characteristic of Parkinson's disease. The second class of movement disorder is called tardive dyskinesia. Signs of this disturbance typically include involuntary movements that most often affect the tongue and facial and neck muscles but can also include the digits and trunk.

Although different antipsychotic drugs have different kinds and degrees of side effects, all share a single biochemical action: they all attenuate the activity of dopamine, a naturally occurring substance in the brain. The reduction in dopamine activity produced by the antipsychotics directly accounts for their effects on motor behavior. It is to be expected, therefore, that disrupted dopamine activity in this system would produce disturbances of movement. It is less clear, however, whether reduced dopamine function is also a factor in the process by which these drugs control psychotic (including schizophrenic) symptoms. See Schizophrenia

Psychopharmacology

 

a multifaceted branch of theoretical and clinical medicine that develops psychotropic agents and studies their mechanisms of action and clinical efficacy. Theoretical psychopharmacology is based on and uses the methods of pharmacology, biochemistry, neurophysiology, and other disciplines. Modern psychopharmacology is divided into psychopharmacokinetics, psychopharmacogenetics, and a number of other areas. It is of particular importance to psychiatry; psychopharmacotherapy is a special field developing within psychiatry to study the use of drugs in the treatment of mental disorders.

The term “psychopharmacology” was introduced by the German scientist D. Macht in 1920. Psychopharmacology as a science dates to 1952, when the French pharmacologist S. Courvoisier and the French surgeon H. M. Laborit studied Aminazinum, a phenothiazine derivative of chlorpromazine, capable of inducing an unusual state of tranquility without disturbing the mind in the way that narcotics do; that same year the French psychiatrists J. Delay, P. Deniker, and J. Harl used the drug to treat psychoses.

Because of its simplicity and safety, psychopharmacotherapy has become a routine mode of therapy for mental patients both in and out of hospitals. The combination of extended psychotherapy and social and work rehabilitation has enabled many patients who had spent much of their lives in mental hospitals to return to their families and resume work. Psychopharmacology has also altered the clinical picture of many psychoses, making their course more favorable (drug-induced pathomorphism). The use of psychopharmacological methods to study the symptomatology and course of psychoses has led to the development of a new branch of medicine, pharmacopsychiatry.

The characteristics of clinical psychopharmacology in the USSR are determined by the dispensary system, which makes it possible to study the effect of psychotropic agents on the course of psychoses both in the hospital when the psychosis is acute and under outpatient conditions; in other words, it allows study of the influence of psychotropic agents on the entire course of a disease and on the body as a whole. Although it does not act on the causes of diseases, psychopharmacotherapy significantly affects their pathogenesis, clinical symptoms, and course.

REFERENCES

Temkov, I., and K. Kirov. Klinicheskaia psikhofarmakologiia. Moscow, 1971. (Translated from Bulgarian.)
Avrutskii, G. Ia., I. Ia. Gurovich, and V. V. Gromova, Farmakoterapiia psikhicheskikh zabolevanii. Moscow, 1974.
Laborit, H., P. Huguenard, and R. Alluaume. “Un Nouveau Stabilisateur végétatif (Le 4560 RP).” Presse médicale, 1952, vol. 60, no. 10, pp. 206–08.
Delay, J., P. Deniker, and J. Harl. “Utilisation en thérapeutique, psychiatrique d’une phénothiazine d’action centrale élective (4560 RP).” Annales médicopsychologiques, 1952, vol. 110(2), pp. 112–17.
Biological Treatment of Mental Illness. Edited by M. Rinkel, New York [1966].

G. IA. AVRUTSKII

psychopharmacology

[¦sī·kō‚fär·mə′käl·ə·jē] (psychology) The science that deals with the action of drugs on mental function.

psychopharmacology


psychopharmacology

 [si″ko-fahr″mah-kol´o-je] 1. the study of the action of drugs on psychological functions and mental states.2. the use of drugs to modify psychological functions and mental states. adj., adj psychopharmacolog´ic.

psy·cho·phar·ma·col·o·gy

(sī'kō-far'mă-kol'ŏ-jē), 1. The use of drugs to treat mental and psychological disorders. 2. The science of drug-behavior relationships. Synonym(s): neuropsychopharmacology [psycho- + G. pharmakon, drug, + logos, study]

psychopharmacology

(sī′kō-fär′mə-kŏl′ə-jē)n. The branch of pharmacology that deals with the study of the actions, effects, and development of psychoactive drugs.
psy′cho·phar′ma·co·log′ic (-kə-lŏj′ĭk), psy′cho·phar′ma·co·log′i·cal (-ĭ-kəl) adj.psy′cho·phar′ma·col′o·gist n.

psy·cho·phar·ma·col·o·gy

(sī'kō-fahr'mă-kol'ŏ-jē) 1. The use of drugs to treat mental and psychological disorders. 2. The science of drug-behavior relationships. [psycho- + G. pharmakon, drug, + logos, study]

psychopharmacology

The study of drugs that affect the state of the mind and the behaviour.

psy·cho·phar·ma·col·o·gy

(sī'kō-fahr'mă-kol'ŏ-jē) 1. Use of drugs to treat mental and psychological disorders. 2. Science of drug-behavior relationships. [psycho- + G. pharmakon, drug, + logos, study]

psychopharmacology


Related to psychopharmacology: Neuropsychopharmacology
  • noun

Words related to psychopharmacology

noun the study of drugs that affect the mind

Related Words

  • materia medica
  • pharmacological medicine
  • pharmacology
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