Dictionary Definition
intoxicant adj : able to intoxicate [syn:
intoxicating]
Noun
1 a liquor or brew containing alcohol as the
active agent; "alcohol (or drink) ruined him" [syn: alcohol, alcoholic
beverage, inebriant]
2 a drug that can produce a state of
intoxication
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- That which intoxicates; an intoxicating agent; as, alcohol, opium and laughing gas are intoxicants.
- Poison.
Adjective
References
Extensive Definition
A psychoactive drug or psychotropic substance is
a chemical
substance that acts primarily upon the central
nervous system where it alters brain function, resulting in
temporary changes in perception, mood,
consciousness and
behaviour. These drugs
may be used recreationally
to purposefully alter one's consciousness, as entheogens for ritual or
spiritual purposes, as a tool for studying or augmenting the mind,
or therapeutically as medication.
Because psychoactive substances bring about
subjective changes in consciousness and mood that the user may find
pleasant (e.g. euphoria) or advantageous (e.g. increased
alertness), many psychoactive substances are abused,
that is, used excessively, despite risks or negative consequences.
With sustained use of some substances, physical
dependence may develop, making the cycle of abuse even more
difficult to interrupt. Drug
rehabilitation can involve a combination of psychotherapy, support
groups and even other psychoactive substances to break the cycle of
dependency.
In part because of this potential for abuse and
dependency, the ethics of drug use are the subject of a continuing
philosophical debate. Many governments worldwide have placed
restrictions on drug production and sales in an attempt to decrease
drug abuse.
History
Drug use is a practice that dates to prehistoric times. There is
archaeological evidence of the use of psychoactive substances
dating back at least 10,000 years, and historical evidence of
cultural use over the past 5,000 years. While medicinal use seems
to have played a very large role, it has been suggested that the
urge to alter one's consciousness is as primary as the drive to
satiate thirst, hunger or sexual desire. Others suggest that
marketing, availability or the pressures of modern life are why
humans use so many psychoactives in their daily lives. However, the
long history of drug use and even children's desire for spinning,
swinging, or sliding indicates that the drive to alter one's state
of mind is universal.
This relationship is not limited to humans. A
number of animals consume different psychoactive plants, animals,
berries and even fermented fruit, becoming intoxicated, such as
cats after consuming catnip. Traditional legends of
sacred plants often contain references to animals that introduced
humankind to their use. Biology suggests an evolutionary connection
between psychoactive plants and animals, as to why these chemicals
and their receptors exist within the nervous system.
The 20th century has seen governments initially
responding to many drugs by banning them and making their use,
supply or trade a criminal offense. A notable example of this is
the Prohibition era
in the United States, where alcohol was made illegal for 13 years.
However, many governments have concluded that illicit drug use
cannot be sufficiently stopped through criminalization. In some
countries, there has been a move toward harm reduction by health
services, where the use of illicit drugs is neither condoned nor
promoted, but services and support are provided to ensure users
have the negative effects of their illicit drug use minimized. This
can go hand-in-hand with supply reduction strategies by
law-enforcement agencies.
Uses of psychoactive substances
Psychoactive substances are used by humans for a
number of different purposes, both legal and illicit.
Anesthesia
General
anesthetics are a class of psychoactive drug used on patients
to block pain and other sensations. Most anesthetics induce
unconsciousness, which allows patients to undergo medical
procedures like surgery
without physical pain or emotional trauma. To induce
unconsciousness, anesthetics affect the GABA and NMDA systems. For
example, halothane is
a GABA agonist, and ketamine is an NMDA receptor
antagonist.
Painkillers
Psychoactive drugs are often prescribed to
manage
pain. As the subjective experience of pain is regulated by
endorphins,
neurochemicals that are endogenous opioids, pain can be managed
using psychoactives that operate on this neurotransmitter system.
This class of drugs includes narcotics, like morphine and codeine, and also NSAIDs such as
aspirin and ibuprofen.
Psychiatric medications
Psychiatric medications are prescribed for the management of mental and emotional disorders. There are 6 major classes of psychiatric medications:- Antidepressants, which are used to treat disparate disorders such as clinical depression, dysthymia, anxiety, eating disorders and borderline personality disorder.
- Stimulants, which are used to treat disorders such as attention deficit disorder and narcolepsy and to suppress the appetite.
- Antipsychotics, which are used to treat psychoses such as schizophrenia and mania.
- Mood stabilizers, which are used to treat bipolar disorder and schizoaffective disorder.
- Anxiolytics, which are used to treat anxiety disorders.
- Depressants, which are used as hypnotics, sedatives, and anesthetics.
Recreational drugs
Many psychoactive substances are used for their
mood and perception altering effects, including those with accepted
uses in medicine and psychiatry. Classes of drugs frequently used
recreationally include:
- Stimulants, which elevate the central nervous system. These are used recreationally for their euphoric and performance-enhancing effects.
- Hallucinogens, which induce perceptual and cognitive distortions.
- Hypnotics, which are used recreationally because they induce inebriation.
- Analgesics, which are used recreationally because of their euphoric effects.
- Inhalants, in the forms of gas aerosols, or solvents, which are inhaled as a vapor inducing stupefying effects.
In many cultures, possessing or having used
recreational drugs is seen as a status
symbol. Recreational drugs, especially those known as club drugs,
are seen as status symbols at social events such as at nightclubs and parties. This
is true of many cultures throughout history; drugs have been viewed
as status symbols since ancient times. For example, in ancient
Egypt, gods were commonly pictured holding hallucinogenic
plants.
Ritual and spiritual use
Certain psychoactives, particularly
hallucinogens, have been used for religious purposes since
prehistoric times. Native Americans have used mescaline-containing peyote cacti for religious
ceremonies for as long as 5700 years. The muscimol-containing Amanita
muscaria mushroom was used for ritual purposes throughout
prehistoric Europe. Various other hallucinogens, including jimsonweed,
psilocybin
mushrooms, and cannabis
have been used in religious ceremonies for centuries. There is
speculation that hallucinogenic mushrooms and cacti greatly
influenced the major religions of India, North and South America,
the Middle East, and Europe, including Christianity.
In the United States, the use of peyote for ritual purposes is
protected only for members of the Native
American Church, which is allowed to cultivate and distribute
peyote. However, the bona
fide religious use of Peyote, regardless of ancestry, is protected
in Colorado, Arizona, New Mexico, Nevada, and Oregon.
Administration
For a substance to be psychoactive, it must cross
the blood-brain
barrier so it can affect neurochemical function. Psychoactive
drugs are administered
in several different ways. In medicine, most psychiatric drugs,
such as fluoxetine,
quetiapine, and
lorazepam are ingested orally in tablet or capsule
form. However, certain medical psychoactives are administered via
inhalation, injection,
or rectal suppository/enema. Recreational drugs can be
administered in several additional ways that are not common in
medicine. Certain drugs, such as alcohol and
caffeine, are ingested
in beverage form; nicotine and cannabis are often smoked; peyote and psilocybin
mushrooms are ingested in botanical form or dried; and certain
crystalline drugs such as cocaine and methamphetamines are
often insufflated.
The efficiency of each method of administration varies from drug to
drug.
Effects
Subjective and behavioral effects
The following Venn diagram
attempts to organize and provide a basic overview of the most
common psychoactive drugs into intersecting groups and subgroups
based upon the subjective and behavioral effects they cause in
humans as well as by their pharmacological classification. Items
within each subgroup are close to those of most similar method of
action, and also follow a general placement in accordance with the
legend below the diagram. Primary intersections are represented via
color mixing.
Legend
Primary groups
- Blue: Stimulants generally increase in potency to the upper left.
- Red: Depressants generally increase in potency to the lower right.
- Green: Hallucinogens are psychedelic to the left, dissociative to the right, generally less predictable down and to the right, and generally more potent towards the bottom.
- Pink: Antipsychotics are generally more sedative/tranquilizing to the right.
Secondary groups
- Cyan (light blue): Overlap of Stimulants (Blue) and Psychedelic hallucinogens (Green) — Primary psychedelics exhibit a stimulant effect
- Yellow : Overlap of Depressants (Red) and Dissociative hallucinogens (Green) — Primary dissociatives exhibit a depressant effect
- Lavender: Overlap of Stimulants (Blue) and Antipsychotics (Pink) - The modern non-sedating antidepressants.
- Salmon: Overlap of Depressants (Red) and Antipsychotics (Pink) - The older sedating antidepressants and anxiolytics.
Tertiary groups
- Magenta (purple): Overlap of Stimulants (Blue) and Depressants (Red) — Example: nicotine exhibits effects of both.
- White: Overlap of Stimulants, Depressants and Hallucinogens — Example: THC exhibits effects of all three sections.
- Sky-blue: Overlap of Stimulants, Psychedelic hallucinogens and Antipsychotics - The empathogens / entactogens.
- Peach: Overlap of Depressants, Dissociative hallucinogens and Antipsychotics
Quaternary group
- Light-pink: Center overlap of all four sections (Stimulants, Depressants, Hallucinogens and Antipsychotics) - Cannabis, containing both THC and CBD, exhibits a mix of all sections, leaning towards the hallucinogen section due to THC being the primary constituent.
Psychoactive drugs operate by temporarily
affecting a person's neurochemistry, which in turn causes changes
in a person's mood, cognition, perception and behavior. There are
many ways in which psychoactive drugs can affect the brain. Each
drug has a specific action on one or more neurotransmitter or
neuroreceptor in
the brain.
Drugs that increase activity in particular
neurotransmitter systems are called agonists. They act by
increasing the synthesis
of one or more neurotransmitters or reducing its reuptake from the synapses. Drugs that reduce
neurotransmitter activity are called antagonists,
and operate by interfering with synthesis or blocking postsynaptic
receptors so that neurotransmitters cannot bind to them.
Exposure to a psychoactive substance can cause
changes in the structure and functioning of neurons, as the nervous system
tries to re-establish the homeostasis disrupted by the
presence of the drug. Exposure to antagonists for a particular
neurotransmitter increases the number of receptors for that
neurotransmitter, and the receptors themselves become more
sensitive. This is called sensitization. Conversely,
overstimulation of receptors for a particular neurotransmitter
causes a decrease in both number and sensitivity of these
receptors, a process called desensitization
or tolerance.
Sensitization and desensitization are more likely to occur with
long-term exposure, although they may occur after only a single
exposure. These processes are thought to underlie addiction.
Affected neurotransmitter systems
The following is a brief table of notable drugs
and their primary neurotransmitter, receptor or method of action.
It should be noted that many drugs act on more than one transmitter
or receptor in the brain.
Addiction
Psychoactive drugs are often associated with
addiction. Addiction can be divided into two types: psychological
addiction, by which a user feels compelled to use a drug
despite negative physical or societal consequence, and physical
dependence, by which a user must use a drug to avoid medically
harmful withdrawal.
Not all drugs are physically addictive, but any activity that
stimulates the brain's dopaminergic reward system — typically, any
pleasurable activity — can lead to psychological addiction. many
professionals, self-help groups, and businesses specialize in
drug
rehabilitation, with varying degrees of success. Many parents
attempt to influence the actions and choices of their children
regarding psychoactives.
Common forms of rehabilitation
include psychotherapy, support
groups and pharmacotherapy, which
uses psychoactive substances to reduce cravings and physiological
withdrawal symptoms
while a user is going through detox. Methadone, itself
an opioid and a
psychoactive substance, is a common treatment for heroin addiction. Recent research
on addiction has shown some promise in using psychedelics
to treat and even cure addictions, although this has
yet to become a widely accepted practice.
Legitimacy
Many recreational drugs are heavily regulated, an
indication of widespread moral objection to variation in
recreational psychoactive drug use. However, critics believe that
regulation of recreational drug use is a violation of personal
autonomy and freedom.
In the United States, critics have noted that
prohibition or regulation of recreational and spiritual drug use
might be unconstitutional.
Because there is controversy about regulation of recreational
drugs, there is an
ongoing debate about drug prohibition. At the beginning of the
21st century, legally prescribed illegal psychoactive drugs used
for legitimate purposes have been targeted by the US Justice
System.
Legality
The legality of psychoactive drugs has been
controversial through most of history; the Opium Wars and
Prohibition are two historical examples of legal controversy
surrounding psychoactive drugs. However, in recent years, the most
influential document regarding the legality of psychoactive drugs
is the
Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs, an international treaty signed in 1961 as an Act
of the United
Nations. Signed by 73 nations including the United
States, the USSR, India, and the
United
Kingdom, the Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs established
Schedules for the legality of each drug and laid out an
international agreement to fight addiction to recreational
drugs by combatting the sale, trafficking, and use of scheduled
drugs. All countries that signed the treaty passed laws to
implement these rules within their borders. However, some countries
that signed the Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs, such as the
Netherlands,
are more lenient with their enforcement of these laws.
In the United States, the
Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has authority over all
drugs, including psychoactive drugs. The FDA regulates which
psychoactive drugs are over
the counter and which are only available with a prescription.
However, certain psychoactive drugs, like alcohol, tobacco, and
drugs listed in the Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs are subject
to criminal laws. The Controlled
Substances Act of 1970 regulates the recreational drugs
outlined in the Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs. Alcohol is
regulated by state governments, but the federal
National Minimum Drinking Age Act penalizes states for not
following a national drinking age. Tobacco is also regulated by all
fifty state governments. Most people accept such restrictions and
prohibitions of certain drugs, especially the "hard" drugs, which
are illegal in most countries.
In the medical context, psychoactive drugs as a
treatment for illness is widespread and generally accepted. Little
controversy exists concerning over
the counter psychoactive medications in antiemetics and antitussives.
Psychoactive drugs are commonly prescribed to patients with
psychiatric disorders. However, certain critics believe that
certain prescription psychoactives, such as antidepressants and
stimulants, are
overprescribed and threaten patients' judgement and autonomy.
See also
References
External links
- Erowid: Extensive online library primarily relating to psychoactive drugs (Wikipedia article about the website: Erowid)
- Journal of Psychoactive Drugs: The first journal established to discuss drugs and drug abuse in the United States. (Wikipedia article about the website: Journal of Psychoactive Drugs)
- Report by the Dutch Government Stating Psilocybin's Relative Harmlessness
- The Lycæum: Resources and discussions relating to psychoactive drugs
- Neuroscience of Psychoactive Substance Use and Dependence by the WHO
- BehaveNet Clinical Capsules: Comprehensive database of psychoactive substances and related pharmacological information
- Research into the cerebral and neuronal effects of drugs use
intoxicant in Bulgarian: Психоактивно
вещество
intoxicant in Danish: Psykoaktivt stof
intoxicant in German: Psychoaktive
Substanz
intoxicant in Spanish: Psicotrópico
intoxicant in French: Psychotrope
intoxicant in Croatian: Psihoaktivne droge
intoxicant in Icelandic: Geðlyf
intoxicant in Italian: Sostanza
psicoattiva
intoxicant in Hebrew: סם פסיכואקטיבי
intoxicant in Kurdish: Psîkotrop
intoxicant in Lithuanian: Narkotikai
intoxicant in Dutch: Psychoactief middel
intoxicant in Japanese: 向精神薬
intoxicant in Norwegian: Psykoaktivt stoff
intoxicant in Polish: Substancja
psychoaktywna
intoxicant in Portuguese: Droga psicoativa
intoxicant in Russian: Психоактивные
вещества
intoxicant in Finnish: Psykoaktiivinen
aine
intoxicant in Chinese: 精神药品