Neurons
Drugs and Addiction
Pharmacology
Treatment
The Brain
100

The primary inhibitory neurotransmitter in the brain.

What is GABA?

100

This is the most commonly used illicit drug.

What is cannabis?

100

This type of drug blocks the action of a neurotransmitter at its receptor.

What is an antagonist?

100

The most common reason why people do not seek treatment for a SUD.

What is denial that they have a problem?

100

This structure prevents toxins—and most drugs—from entering the brain.

What is the blood-brain barrier?

200

Excitatory ionotropic receptors open this type of channel in the middle of the receptor.

What is sodium?

200

This age group has the highest frequency of abuse of most substances.

What is young adults?

200

The route of administration that gets a drug to the brain the fastest.

What is inhalation?

200

The medical management of withdrawal symptoms.

What is detox?

200

This pathway in the brain is important for feelings of reward, motivation, and addiction.

What is the mesolimbic dopamine pathway?

300

This action of a neurotransmitter or drug will make an action potential less likely to occur. 

What is hyperpolarization?

300

This term can describe the process by which people use drugs to reduce anxiety or eliminate withdrawal symptoms.

What is negative reinforcement?

300

The minimum dose of a drug needed to obtain a desired effect.

What is potency?

300

This treatment option is best for those with underlying psychiatric symptoms, severe SUDs, and/or limited social support.

What is inpatient treatment?

300

This brain region is responsible for self-control and delaying gratification.

What is the prefrontal cortex?

400

Cocaine and SSRIs can be classified as this type of drug based on their ability to block the recycling of neurotransmitters.

What is a reuptake inhibitor?

400

A class of drugs that targets serotonin synapses.

What are psychedelics?

400

This drug binds to and activates receptors, but only elicits a sub-maximal effect.

What is a partial agonist?

400

This therapeutic technique target's a person's ambivalence towards change.

What is motivational interviewing?

400

Alcohol, at high doses, can be fatal by inhibiting this brain structure.

What is the brainstem?

500

This drug increases dopamine signaling by inhibiting GABA neurons.

What is cannabis / opioids / alcohol?

500

Exposure to a drug-predictive cue will elicit this response. 

What is craving?

500

The metabolic process by which a constant percentage of a drug is eliminated every half-life.

What is first-order kinetics?

500

This therapeutic technique helps people who use drugs identify their triggers and devise a coping plan.

What is relapse prevention?

500

If someone consumes too much alcohol tonight, they may experience a blackout. This would be caused by inhibition of this brain structure.

What is the hippocampus?