Benzodiazepines: Difference between revisions

>Unity
Use BenzoWarning and DangerousIntro template. Make 'Chemical classes' section as subsection of 'Chemistry'. 'Preparation methods' over 'Medical uses'.
>BronzeManul
Replaced substitutive skeletal structure image with standardised svg image.
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{{DepressantOD|benzodiazepines}}
{{DepressantOD|benzodiazepines}}
[[File:Benzodiazepine1.png|227px|thumb|right|The core structure of benzodiazepines]]
[[File:Substituted_benzodiazepine.svg|227px|thumb|right|The core structure of benzodiazepines]]
[[File:Xanax (alprazolam) 2 mg.jpg|200px|thumbnail|[[Xanax]] (alprazolam) 2 mg tri-score tablets]]
[[File:Xanax (alprazolam) 2 mg.jpg|200px|thumbnail|[[Xanax]] (alprazolam) 2 mg tri-score tablets]]
'''Benzodiazepines''' (commonly referred to as '''benzos''') are a class of psychoactive substances that act as central nervous system [[depressants]]. These substances work by magnifying the efficiency and effects of the principal inhibitory [[neurotransmitter]] '''gamma-aminobutyric acid''' ([[GABA]]) by binding to and acting on its receptors.<ref>Benzodiazepine interactions with GABA receptors (PubMed.gov / NCBI) | http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/6147796</ref>  
'''Benzodiazepines''' (commonly referred to as '''benzos''') are a class of psychoactive substances that act as central nervous system [[depressants]]. These substances work by magnifying the efficiency and effects of the principal inhibitory [[neurotransmitter]] '''gamma-aminobutyric acid''' ([[GABA]]) by binding to and acting on its receptors.<ref>Benzodiazepine interactions with GABA receptors (PubMed.gov / NCBI) | http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/6147796</ref>