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Journal Article

Citation

Creagh Reyes S, Warden D, Latif MA, Paydar A. Clin. Radiol. Imaging J. 2018; 2(1): e116.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, Medwin Publishers)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Synthetic drugs contain substances that are pharmacologically similar to those found in traditional illicit drugs. Some of the most commonly abused synthetic drugs include synthetic marijuana, bath salts, ecstasy, N-bomb, methamphetamine and anabolic steroids. Many of them share the same chemical properties and physiologic responses with the drugs they mimic and may exaggerate the pathologic response in the brain leading to addiction. These drugs have detrimental (and often irreversible) effects on the brain and primarily affect the central nervous system by two mechanisms: 1) Neural hyper stimulation via increasing activation of certain neurotransmitters (norepinephrine, dopamine, and serotonin), 2) Cause significant reduction in CNS neural connectivity affecting various brain regions such as the basal ganglia, hippocampus, cerebellum, parietal lobe, and globus pallidus. Furthermore these drugs sometimes have severe, lifethreatening adverse effects on the human body. A few structural MRI studies have been conducted in synthetic drug abusers to reveal the effects of these drugs on the brain parenchyma. This review article will describe the potential brain imaging findings in synthetic drug abusers as demonstrated by several case reports and the primary literature.

Keywords: MRI; Pharmacologically; Pathophysiologic; Cannabinoids; Cathinone; N-methylamphetamine

Copyright© the authors.


Language: en

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