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ants, and today their use can still be observed in many surviving tribal
cultures. The exact drug used depends on what the particular ecosystem
a given tribe lives in can support, and are typically found growing wild.
Such drugs include various psychedelic mushrooms and cacti, along with
many other plants. These societies generally attach spiritual significance to
such
drug use, and often incorporate it into their religious practices.
With the proliferation of agriculture, new psychoactives came into
use as a natural by-product of farming. Among them were opium, canna-
bis, and alcohol derived from the fermentation of cereals and fruits.
Most societies began developing herblore, lists of herbs which were
good for treating various physical and mental ailments.
In the latter half of the 20th century, research into new psychophar-
macologic
drugs exploded, with many new drugs being discovered,
created, and tested.
Only since the 1950s has the use of psychiatric drugs to restore
mental health, or at least limit aberrant behavior, been a part of medical
therapeutics, when a number of new classes of pharmacological agents
were discovered. Additionally, psychedelic drugs (
LSD
and
psilocybin)
and
empathogens
(MDMA) were popularized among many psychiatrists
for a certain time, as very helpful tools to assist psychotherapy.
Lithium
is widely used to allay the symptoms of affective
disorders and espe-
cially to prevent recurrences of both the manic and the depressive epi-
sodes in manic-depressive individuals.
Since scientists have found a direct relationship between dopamine
blockage and reduction of schizophrenic symptoms, many believe that
schizophrenia may be related to excess dopamine.
In
psychopharmacology,
researchers are interested in any substance
that crosses the blood-brain barrier and thus has an effect on behavior,
mood or cognition. Drugs are researched for their physicochemical pro-
perties,
physical side effects, and psychological side effects.
Clinical studies are often very specific, typically beginning with
animal testing, and ending with human testing. In the human testing pha-
se, there is often a group of subjects, one group is given a placebo, and
the other is administered a carefully measured therapeutic dose of the
drug in question. After all of the testing is completed, the drug is propo-
sed to the concerned regulatory authority, and is either commercially in-
troduced to the public via prescription, or deemed safe enough for over
the counter sale.
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Though particular drugs are prescribed
for specific symptoms or
syndromes, they are usually not specific to the treatment of any single
mental disorder. Because of their ability to modify the behavior of even
the most disturbed patients, the antipsychotic, and antidepressant agents
have greatly affected the management of the hospitalized mentally ill,
enabling hospital staff to devote more of their attention to therapeutic
efforts and enabling many patients to lead relatively normal lives outside
of the hospital.
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