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Psychoactive Substances and Their Effects: A Comprehensive Study, Exercises of Nursing

A detailed analysis of various psychoactive substances, their effects, and related topics. It covers the psychoactive effects of cannabis, cocaine, mdma, and alcohol, including their metabolites, receptors, and withdrawal symptoms. Additionally, it discusses inhalant intoxication, hallucinogens, and their association with substance use disorders (sud). The document also delves into cognitive behavioral therapies, stress management techniques, and family therapy models. It is an essential resource for students and professionals in psychology, neuroscience, and related fields.

Typology: Exercises

2023/2024

Available from 05/23/2024

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Download Psychoactive Substances and Their Effects: A Comprehensive Study and more Exercises Nursing in PDF only on Docsity! Kaplan and Sadock questions with correct answers What is the cannabinoid primarily responsible for psychoactive effect of cannabis? - ANSWER: ✔ Delta-9- tetrahydrocannabinol What is the active metabolite of delta9-THC that is active in the CNS? - ANSWER: ✔ 11-hydroxy-delta9- THC What type of receptor is the cannabinoid receptor? - ANSWER: ✔ G-protein-linked family Where in the brain are cannabinoid receptors found? - ANSWER: ✔ Highest: Basal ganglia, hippocampus and cerebellum lowest: cerebral cortex no receptor in the brainstorm- minimal effects of cannabis on respiratory and cardiac functions When do euphoric effects of cannabis peak? - ANSWER: ✔ If smoked- 30 minutes What are most common physical effects of Cannabis> - ANSWER: ✔ conjunctival injection mild tachycardia How long can a urinary drug screen detect cannabis? - ANSWER: ✔ 4 weeks what is introjection? - ANSWER: ✔ the unconscious adoption of the ideas or attitudes of others. what is the metabolite of cocaine? - ANSWER: ✔ benzoylecgonine How long does metabolite of cocaine remain in the urine? - ANSWER: ✔ 1-3 days generally 7-12 days if chronic high dose user how long can hair samples show amphetamines? - ANSWER: ✔ 90 daysh How long does MDMA stay in urine? - ANSWER: ✔ 1-4 days what percentage of those in alcohol withdrawal experience DT? - ANSWER: ✔ 10% When does alcohol withdrawalo= occur? - ANSWER: ✔ 4-12 hours; levels dip sharply what percentage of those in alcohol withdrawal experience tonic clonic seizures> - ANSWER: ✔ 2-3% what substance is most associated with poly drug use? - ANSWER: ✔ MDMA What separates inhalant intoxication from alcohol and benozs? - ANSWER: ✔ generalized muscle weakness depressed reflexes blurred vision What is found in etch/benzo intoxication but not inhalant? - ANSWER: ✔ memory or concentration changes what disorders most common with cannibus use disorders? - ANSWER: ✔ anxiety 24% bipolar disorder 13% MDD 11% What are 3 main classes of hallucinogens? - ANSWER: ✔ indoleamines ergolines phenylakylamines token economy - ANSWER: ✔ an operant conditioning procedure in which people earn a token of some sort for exhibiting a desired behavior and can later exchange the tokens for various privileges or treats Ventilation - ANSWER: ✔ Catharsis - ANSWER: ✔ a release of emotional tension Transactional Theory of Stress - ANSWER: ✔ explains how stressors are perceived and appraised, as well as how people respond to those perceptions and appraisals Bowen Model - ANSWER: ✔ family therapy; focuses on a person's differentiation from his or her family of origin The psychodynamic experimental model family therapy - ANSWER: ✔ emphasizes individual freedom from unconscious patterns of anxiety and projection rooted in the past of the context in the family system The general systems model family therapy - ANSWER: ✔ every action in the family produces a reaction in one or more of its members the structural model (family therapy) - ANSWER: ✔ families are viewed as single interrelated systems Personalization - ANSWER: ✔ distortion of thinking in which a person takes responsibility or blame for events that are unconnected to the person Catastrophizing - ANSWER: ✔ Dramatically exaggerating the negative consequences of any minor event Overgeneralization - ANSWER: ✔ the tendency to interpret a single negative event as a never-ending pattern of defeat and failure transference neurosis - ANSWER: ✔ The "artificial neurosis" that occurs during the course of psychoanalysis and that involves the development of transference reaction formation - ANSWER: ✔ psychoanalytic defense mechanism by which the ego unconsciously switches unacceptable impulses into their opposites. Thus, people may express feelings that are the opposite of their anxiety-arousing unconscious feelings. projective identification - ANSWER: ✔ occurs in close relationships, where one person induces feelings/impulses which are viewed as unacceptable in the other person Fixation - ANSWER: ✔ according to Freud, a lingering focus of pleasure-seeking energies at an earlier psychosexual stage, in which conflicts were unresolved Triangulation - ANSWER: ✔ Family Sculpting - ANSWER: ✔ A nonverbal experiential technique that consists of physically arranging members of a family in space, which reveals significant aspects of their perceptions and feelings about one another. hot triangle - ANSWER: ✔ family therapy reframing - ANSWER: ✔ also known as positive connotation paradoxical therapy - ANSWER: ✔ therapist suggests that the patient engage in the behavior with negative connotations (e.g., a phobia or compulsion). Corrective Emotional Experience (CEE) - ANSWER: ✔ A reparative, real life experience with the therapist that resolves rather than seemingly repeats a familiar but maladaptive relational pattern. Twinship Transference - ANSWER: ✔ The patient experiences the therapist as someone like himself mirror transference - ANSWER: ✔ A transference in which a person who had not been adequately mirrored—that is, confirmed and given approval—by his mother relives these experiences with the therapist. When such a transference develops, the patient has the opportunity to work through those negative experiences with the therapist and hence to overcome his or her feelings of worthlessness. Idealizing transference: Kohut - ANSWER: ✔ narcissistic transference dichotomous thinking - ANSWER: ✔ thinking in which things are perceived as "either/or"—for example, "good or bad," "big or small," "right or wrong" selective abstraction - ANSWER: ✔ A cognitive distortion that involves forming conclusions based on an isolated detail of an event. Overgeneralization - ANSWER: ✔ the tendency to interpret a single negative event as a never-ending pattern of defeat and failure arbitrary realization - ANSWER: ✔ Externalization - ANSWER: ✔ the attribution of an event or occurrence to causes outside the self
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