sedative drug
A doctor prescribes a sedative drug to help a patient relax before a minor procedure.
Noun: A sedative drug is a substance that reduces nervous excitement, agitation, or anxiety, producing a calming or tranquilizing effect on a person. It depresses the central nervous system to induce relaxation and, in higher doses, can promote sleep.
Sedative drugs are primarily used in medical contexts to alleviate anxiety, induce sleep, or calm a patient before a medical procedure. * The doctor prescribed a sedative drug to help the patient manage severe preoperative anxiety. * Some sedative drugs can be habit-forming if used improperly or for extended periods.
- In a clinical/medical context: The term is often used to describe a class of pharmaceuticals with specific therapeutic purposes.
- Benzodiazepines are a common class of sedative drug used for short-term treatment of anxiety disorders.
- Contrast with other depressants: While all sedatives are central nervous system depressants, the term "sedative drug" specifically highlights the calming and anxiety-reducing effect, as opposed to purely inducing sleep (hypnotics) or causing general anesthesia.
- Sedative (n/adj): The more common short form. As a noun: "The nurse administered a sedative." As an adjective: "The medication has a sedative effect."
- Tranquilizer (n, chiefly US), Tranquilliser (n, chiefly UK): A near-synonym, often used interchangeably with "sedative drug," though sometimes associated with antipsychotic medications in broader classifications.
- Depressant (n): A broader category of drugs that slow down central nervous system activity, which includes sedatives, hypnotics, and anesthetics.
- Anxiolytic (n/adj): A drug specifically designed to reduce anxiety; a type of sedative drug.
- Calmative
- Tranquillizer
- Anxiolytic (specifically for anxiety reduction)
- Downer (informal/slang)
- Stimulant
- Analeptic
- Upper (informal/slang)
- Sedative-hypnotic: A term for drugs that have both calming (sedative) and sleep-inducing (hypnotic) properties depending on the dose.
- Barbiturates are potent sedative-hypnotic drugs.
- To be under sedation: A phrase describing the state induced by a sedative drug.
- The patient was under sedation during the minor surgical procedure.
A doctor prescribes a sedative drug to help a patient relax before a minor procedure.
- a drug that reduces excitability and calms a person