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tranquilizer
(redirected from ataractic agent)

   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Hutchinson 0.06 sec.
tranquilizer, drug whose action calms the central nervous system nervous system, network of specialized tissue that controls actions and reactions of the body and its adjustment to the environment. Virtually all members of the animal kingdom have at least a rudimentary nervous system.
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, decreasing emotional agitation without impairing alertness. Tranquilizing drugs differ from hypnotic drugs such as barbiturates barbiturate (bärbĭch`ərāt'), any one of a group of drugs that act as depressants on the central nervous system .
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 in that they do not act on the brain's cortical areas but rather on its lower portions, e.g., the hypothalamus hypothalamus (hī'pəthăl`əməs)
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. They have been found helpful in the treatment of tension and mental illness. Reserpine reserpine (rĕsûr`pēn), alkaloid isolated from the root of the snakeroot plant (Rauwolfia serpentina
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, which appeared on the market in 1952, was the first tranquilizer to be used in modern Western medicine. Other drugs used as tranquilizers include the phenothiazines phenothiazine (fē'nəthī`əzĭn), any one of a class of drugs used to control mental disorders.
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, meprobamate meprobamate (məprō`bəmāt')
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, certain muscle relaxants and anticonvulsants, and lithium carbonate. See also psychopharmacology psychopharmacology (sī'kōfär'məkŏl`əjē)
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tranquilizer

Drug used to reduce anxiety, fear, tension, agitation, and related disturbed mental states. Major tranquilizers (antipsychotic agents, or neuroleptics) are used to treat schizophrenia and other psychoses; phenothiazines, including chlorpromazine, are the best known. They are thought to block the activity of the neurotransmitter dopamine in the brain. Minor tranquilizers (antianxiety agents, or anxiolytics) are used to treat anxiety and tension; they are usually benzodiazepines, including diazepam (Valium) and chlordiazepoxide (Librium). They have a calming effect and reduce both physical and psychological effects of anxiety, fear, and stress by enhancing the action of the neurotransmitter gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) in the brain.


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