ataractic drug
Noun: A pharmaceutical substance used to diminish anxiety, nervousness, or emotional tension while maintaining normal cognitive function and mental alertness. It is a type of tranquilizer designed to calm a person without causing significant sedation or clouding of consciousness.
The term is used in medical and pharmacological contexts to describe a specific class of psychotropic medications. It is a formal and technical term.
- The physician prescribed an ataractic drug to manage the patient's chronic anxiety without impairing her ability to work.
- Early ataractic drugs represented a significant advancement over sedatives that caused drowsiness.
- Research focuses on developing new ataractic drugs with fewer side effects.
- The term is often used in historical or comparative discussions of psychopharmacology, as many modern medications are now described with more specific terms like "anxiolytic" or "non-sedating tranquilizer."
- Ataractic (Adjective/Noun): Having a calming or tranquilizing effect; a drug that produces such an effect.
- The medicine had an ataractic effect.
- Ataraxia (Noun): A state of serene calmness, freedom from emotional disturbance.
- Tranquilizer (Noun): A broader term for a drug that induces tranquility; ataractic drugs are a subset of tranquilizers.
- Anxiolytic
- Minor tranquilizer
- Anti-anxiety agent
- Stimulant
- Anxiogenic (anxiety-producing) agent
The word "ataractic" is derived from Greek ataraktos, meaning "not disturbed, calm." While still accurate, in contemporary clinical language, more specific terms like "anxiolytic" (especially for benzodiazepines or SSRIs prescribed for anxiety) are more commonly used than the general term "ataractic drug."
- a drug used to reduce stress or tension without reducing mental clarity