Transcript Caffeinism
most commonly consumed psychoactive drug
in the world
◦ in US – consumed by 80% adult population
◦ found in coffee, tea, cola, chocolate and cocoa
◦ also found in many prescription and OTC
medications
(FDA estimates ~1000 prescription and 2000 OTC
contain caffeine)
safe and can be added to just about anything that we can
swallow!
200 mg in 4 ounces!!!!
“
commodity traded most extensively in the
world is oil (wars fought over oil)
Next most widely traded commodity
◦ caffeine
raw material includes coffee beans, tea leaves, cola
nuts
estimates ~ 120,000 tons/year; employs more than
20,000,000 people
Chinese claim to have discovered tea around
2700 BCE
At least ½ the world drinks tea
England and China – fed each others
addictions
◦ China provided tea for England and England (from
their British Colonies close to India) provided China
with Opium
Cutty Sark - renovated Tea- clipper
last survivor - mid 1800’s
now in Greenwich England
called “Clipper ships” very fast sailing ships built to cut
the time needed to get tea from
India and China back to Europe
absorption – oral caffeine is rapidly and
completely absorbed
◦ significant blood levels within 30 – 45 min;
completely absorption over next 90 min
◦ freely and equally distributed throughout the body
◦ crosses placenta to fetus
breast milk = or exceeds level in maternal plasma
Pharmacokinetics:
Half-life is ~3.5–5 hour in adult humans,
but 60–100 hours in infants.
Half-life is reduced by 30–50 percent in
smokers; doubled in women on oral
contraceptives (and prolonged during last
trimester of pregnancy).
metabolized by liver before excretion
◦ main metabolites; theophylline, theobromine
◦ CYP1A2 enzyme
certain SSRI antidepressants (flovoxamine) are potent
CYP1A2 inhibitors – caution needed…..
Tolerance:
Some effects that became tolerant in humans:
◦ Blood pressure, heart rate
◦ Adrenalin, noradrenalin levels
◦ Anxiety, nervousness, energy
Tolerance:
Some effects that did not show tolerance:
◦ Caffeine-induced alertness and wakefulness
◦ Cerebral energy metabolism
Sleep is the physiological function most sensitive
to the effects of caffeine.
◦ Caffeine increases the time it takes to go to sleep
and the total duration, but does not disturb the
phases.
◦ Some tolerance develops to sleep disturbance.
EFFECT OF AN
ADENOSINE
ANTAGONIST
(CAFFEINE) ON
SLEEP IN A
NORMAL SUBJECT
Reinforcement:
not a powerful reinforcer in animals selfadministering intravenously.
Reinforcement varies with dose –
◦
does not directly increase DA in mesolimbic regions –
maybe prefrontal cortex
Discrimination
Human subjects can discriminate caffeine from
placebo, in coffee or capsules
Doses of 300 mg or more are most reliably
detected, but some people can detect much
lower doses
ingestion of 85 – 250 mg caffeine (1 -3 cups
of coffee) increases capacity for sustained
attention and decreased reaction time
fine or delicate muscular coordination or
timing…..
600-750mg a day of caffeine probably will
NOT make someone feel very well
Toxicity:
Caffeinism – (typically above 1000 mg/kg
6 deaths in humans; lethal dose estimated at 10
grams taken orally (about 100 cups of coffee); death
is due to convulsions and respiratory collapse.
Is caffeine safe in pregnancy?
◦ Controversial
3 types of related alkaloids from plants
1.
2.
3.
theophylline
caffeine
theobromine
1.
2.
relax smooth muscle (notably bronchial
muscles)
stimulate CNS and cardiac muscle
•
3.
theophylline and caffeine more than theobromine
produce diuresis in kidneys
therapeutically- used to treat a variety of
disorders
◦ asthma (theophylline mostly to relax
respiratory
muscles)
◦ narcolepsy (to maintain daytime wakefulness)
◦ migraine
◦ adjunct to treat headache and other pain
syndromes
Caffeine – effective psychostimulant
heavy consumption (12 or more cups/day or
1.5 g caffeine)
◦ agitation, anxiety, tremors, rapid breathing,
insomnia
lethal dose – 10 g (100 cups of coffee)
people with anxiety disorders – especially
sensitive to caffeine
anxiety disorders
tremors
possible dehydration
caffeine exerts variety of effects in CNS at
different doses
◦ most likely – blockade of adenosine receptors
◦ so adenosine antagonist!
◦ represents major site of action
Adenosine –
◦ neuromodulator of several nt in CNS
◦ majority of adenosine effects are sedating,
depressing, and anticonvulsant