alcohol is known as this to our bodies.
What is a depressant?
the drug that fentanyl is similar to but stronger than.
What is morphine?
continued meth uses causes changes in the brain's dopamine system that is associated with what.
What is reduced coordination and impaired verbal learning?
inhalants affect the brain in ways similar to these types of drugs.
What are depressant (tranquilizers, sedatives, alcohol)
relationship between the drug dose and the strength of the effect.
what is potency?
all the side effects of alcohol is a result of the brain cells communicating how.
What is a slower rate?
the natural type of receptor that your body has.
what is opioid receptor?
cocaine prevents what action from happening in the neuron?
What is the reuptake?
the things that make hallucinogens depend on that make them so unpredictable whether or not the trip is good or bad.
what is how much you take, your personality, your current mood, surroundings, and expectations?
this neurotransmitter regulates mood, sleep, hunger, body temperature, muscle control, and sensory perception.
What is serotonin?
this is where the THC binds to in the brain to produce the mellowing and relaxing effect.
What is the cannabinoid receptors?
When breathing becomes shallow, slow, or irregular, and the body then receives less oxygen.
What is depressed breathing?
what brain region acts like a brake on other regions of the limbic system when we decide to forget a pleasure to avoid its negative consequences.
What is the frontal cortex?
where inhalants travel to in the body.
What is to the lungs, then the bloodstream, then the brain?
the neurotransmitter that regulates emotions, learning, memory, responses to environment, and pain perception.
What is glutamate?
What is GABA?
the type of drug that fentanyl is.
What is agonist?
the 4 areas of the brain that meth causes neuronal death to.
ALL OR NONE QUESTION
What are the hippocampus, the parietal cortex, the frontal/prefrontal cortex, and the cerebellum?
dissociative hallucinogens interfere with this neurotransmitter.
What is glutamate?
when there is a temporary loss of consciousness in which the memories were formed and can be brought back.
What is a greyout?
3 brain regions that marijuana impacts.
ALL OR NONE QUESTION
What is the hippocampus, the cerebellum, and the basal ganglia?
overdosing on fentanyl causes or breathing to slow or stop which causes a decrease of oxygen reaching the brain is called.
What is hypoxia?
cocaine impacts what part of the brain involved with the goals of getting high.
what are the nucleus accumbens?
the protection of a part of a neuron that helps to speed up messages.
What is the myelin sheath?
what is made up of a large network of nerves in your brain that allows information and communication to be exchanged between different areas of your brain?
what is white matter?