1.41k likes | 1.71k Vues
Substance Use Disorders. By: Dr. Majid Al- Desouki Consultant and Clinical Assistant Professor. Introduction. Many implications for brain research & clinical psychiatry. Affect mental state and behavior. Sx similar to the psychiatric disorders. What is addiction?.
E N D
SubstanceUse Disorders By: Dr. Majid Al-Desouki Consultant and Clinical Assistant Professor
Introduction • Many implications for brain research & clinical psychiatry. • Affect mental state and behavior. • Sx similar to the psychiatric disorders.
What is addiction? • In Aug 2011, The American Society of Addiction Medicine (ASAM) has officially recognized Addiction as mostly: • a social problem • a moral problem • a criminal problem • a primary chronic brain problem • a behavioral disorder occur as the result of other causes such as emotional or psychiatric problems. Addiction is not a choice, but choice still plays an important role in getting help.
Introduction (cont.) • DSM-5: • Substances + substance related disorders • Substance vs. drug • Legal & illegal substances • Chemicals with brain-altering properties (e.g. organic solvents)
Terminology Abuse:self-administration of any substance in a culturally disapproved manner that causes adverse consequences. Intoxication:the transient effect (physical and psychological) due to recent substance ingestion, which disappears when the substance is eliminated. Withdrawal: a group of symptoms and signs occurring when the drug is withdrawn or reduced in amount.
Terminology (cont.) Dependence:the physiological state of neuroadaptation produced by repeated administration of a drug, necessitating continued administration to prevent appearance of withdrawal state. Addiction:a nonscientific term that implies dependence and associated deterioration of physical mental health as well as high tendency to relapse after discontinuation.
Family/neighborhood disorganization Authorianism; coercive parent- child interactions Aggression and/or anxiety problems Parental substance use Elementary-age rejected or isolated peer relationships Low parental monitoring Early experimenting with substance use Deviant peer associations in early youth Substance abuse and dependence
Complications Psychological Drugs Social Medical
Assessement • Collateral history. • Urine screening tests. • blood screening tests (alcohol, barbiturates). • Pattern of Abuse: • What? (type, dose, route, effect: nature and duration). • How? (frequency, duration, how long, source, and situation) • Why? (? psychosocial problems). • Dependence? • Complications : • Psychosocial….. • Physical…..
Alcohol Kills More Than AIDS, TB or Violence-WHO report (Feb 2011) • Alcohol causes nearly 4% of deaths worldwide, more than AIDS, tuberculosis or violence. • Alcohol is the world's leading risk factor for death among males aged 15-59 • Alcohol is a causal factor in 60 types of diseases and injuries. • Now we have strong evidence of a causal relationship between drinking and breast cancer.
Epidemiology • dependence is most common in those aged 40 – 55 years. • In USA : • 13 % men and 4 % women age 18 • 20-40% hospital admissions • Alcoholics who continue drinking have a shortened life-span of 15 years why?
Clinical presentation • Alcohol intoxication: early intoxication includes sense of well-being, emotional lability, irritability and incoordination to ataxia and slurred speech • Heavy intoxication (bl > 300 mg/ml) alcoholic coma & death
Alcohol Dependence • Current rate of alcohol dependence is 5%. • Common symptoms: need for daily use of larger amounts of alcohol for adequate functioning, and inability to cut down or stop the drinking.
Clinical presentation (cont) • Alcohol withdrawal:Sx may begin after 6 hours of cessation or reduction of alcohol and peak by 48 hours, they follow a drop in blood concentration, symptoms subside over the course of 6-7 days • epileptic tonic clonic seizures may develop within 12-24 hours after cessation of alcohol intake • Delirium tremens may develop after about 48 hours
DSM-5 criteria for Alcohol withdrawal : • - Cessation or reduction in heavy alcohol use. • - two or more of the following (several hours – few days): - autonomic hyperactivity - increased hand tremor - insomnia - nausea or vomiting - transient hallucinations or illusions - psychomotor agitation - anxiety - grand mal seizures - impairment in function • Not due to a general medical condition or mental disorder
Delirium Tremens (DTs): Severe form of alcohol withdrawal after 2-3 days: - gradual onset of delirium, fluctuating consciousness, disorientation, agitation, hallucinations, illusions and delusions. - gross tremors - autonomic disturbance - dehydration and electrolyte disturbance - marked insomnia
Peaks on 3rd or 4th day and lasts 3-5 days, worsens at night and followed by a period of prolonged deep sleep from which the person awakes with no symptoms and has amnesia for the period of the delirium. • Complications include: • Seizures • Chest infection & aspiration • Violent behavior • Coma • Death (mortality rate: 5-15%) Causes: • Volume depletion • Cardiac arrhythmias • Electrolyte imbalance • Infections DT is a serious MEDICAL emergency detection and treatment
Alcohol-Induced Persisting Amnestic disorder • Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome • Prolonged heavy use of alcohol • Wernicke’s encephalopathy is an acute reversible syndrome characterized by ataxia, vestibular dysfunction, confusion and ocular motility abnormalities, it may resolve spontaneously in a few days or progress to: • Korsakoff’s syndrome: a chronic amnestic syndrome that can follow Wernicke’s encephalopathy, characterized by impaired mental syndrome (esp. recent memory)and anterograde amnesia in an alert and responsive pt. • Only 20% of Korsakoff’s syndrome fully recover • Treated by thiamine 100mg two – three times daily for 1 to 2 weeks (if the case develops to Korsakoff’s syndrome treatment should be continued for 3 to 12 months)
Alcohol intoxication Ethanol plasma concentrations Vs. CNS effects
Alcohol withdrawal • 70 % of AD patients & Rate in the elderly. • No gender/ethnic differences • 85% mild-to-moderate • 15% severe and complicated: • Seizures • Delirium Tremens • Features : • Tremulousness (hands, legs and trunk). • Nausea, retching and vomiting. • Sweating, tachycardia and fever. • Anxiety, insomnia and irritability. • Cognitive dysfunctions. • Thinking and perceptual disturbances.
Course of AW Stages • I (24 – 48 hours): • II (48 – 72 hours): • III (72 – 105 hours): • IV (> 7 days): Symptoms • Peak severity at 36 hours 90% of AW seizures Most cases self-limited • Stage I symptoms • “Delirium Tremens” • Protracted withdrawal
Risk factors of Alcohol abuse • Vulnerable personality: impulsive, gregarious, less conforming, isolated or avoidant persons. • Vulnerable occupation: senior businessmen, journalists, doctors. • Psychosocial stresses: social isolation, financial, occupational or academic difficulties, and marital conflicts. • Emotional problems: anxiety, chronic insomnia depression.
Is your patient ETOH dependent?CAGE questionnaire • C = Have you ever felt you must Cut down your drinking? • A= Have people Annoyed you by criticizing your drinking? • G = Have you ever felt Guilty about your drinking? • E = Have you ever had a drink first thing in the morning as an “Eye opener”?
Laboratory Tests • Identify acute and/or heavy drinking (> 5 drinks/day): • Blood Alcohol Levels (BAL). • Gamma-glutamyltransferase (GGTP > 35 IU/L) • Carbohydrate Deficient Transferrin (CDT > 20 IU/L) • Erythrocyte mean corpuscular volume (MCV >91.5 3) • High AST/ALT *** CDT + GGTP best diagnostic combination.
Treatment • Treating Alcohol Intoxicated Patient: Conscious : supportive, antipsychotic if agitated. Unconscious: ABC • Treating Alcohol Withdrawal: Supportive, thiamine & long acting BDZ ± anticonvulsants for seizure. • Maintaining Abstinence: • Medications: • Disulfiram – blockade of aldehydedehydrogenase cummulation of acetaldehyde - nausea, flushing, tachycardia, hyperventilation, panic… • Naloxone – reduces alcohol-induced reward. • Acamprosate – anti-craving effects . • Psychological: group Tx, AA, relapse prevention.
Sedatives, Hypnotics, and Anxiolytics • Similar clinical manifestations to alcohol. • withdrawal from short-acting substances (e.g. triazolam) can begin within 4 - 6 hours. • Alcohol and all drugs of this class are brain depressants any risk? - are cross-tolerant and cross-dependant. • withdrawal can be accomplished safely using diazepam, phenobarbital, and pentobarbital, dose reduced in steps (about 1/4 - 1/10 of daily benzodiazepine dose, every two weeks). • BDZ have a large margin of safety & less addiction potentials. • Flumazenil is a BDZ receptor antagonists used in BDZ overdose.
Introduction • Opioids have been used for at least 3500 years • Mostly in the form of crude opium • Morphine was the first to be isolated in 1806 and codeine in 1832 • Opium comes from the juice of the opium poppy (papaversomniferum) which contains about 20 opium alkaloids including morphine
This group includes several narcotic substances • Opium • Heroin • Morphine • Codeine • Pethidine • Methadone • Pentazocain • Some of these compounds are naturally occurring (e.g. opium, codeine) while others are synthetic or semi-synthetic • Some of these substances are for medical use like pethidine while others are solely substance of abuse like heroin • The medical use of opioids are mainly for there powerful analgesic effect - while they are abused for they are euphorianteffect
Intoxication • Significant maladaptive behavior • Including : dysphoria, agitation, retardation, impaired judgment … • Papillary constriction or dilatation (in OD) • Or one or more of the following: drowsiness or coma, slurred speech, impairment in attention or memory. • Symptoms are not due to a medical condition.
Opioid withdrawal .. • The symptoms due to withdrawal from opiods are flulike including: • Lacrimation • Dysphoric mood • Insomnia • Muscle and joint pain • Cold and hot flushes • Nausea, vomiting and diarrhea • Intense craving for the drug is a recognized feature of the drug - it begins about 6 hours after the last dose and peaks after 36-48 hours - then wanes • Untreated withdrawal result in no serious medical sequence - but they cause great distress • Tolerance can develop very rapidly (esp. in IV use) leading to increasing dosage - then it diminishes very rapidly
TX. Opioids OD,, • Opioids overdose can be very dangerous (due to respiratory depression) therefore they should be treated carefully in the ICU - Naloxone is a short acting antidote that is used to normalize respiration and to restore consciousness - open airway, O2, IV fluids - vital signs monitoring. • Opioid withdrawal • - Assess the severity and give symptomatic treatment: pain killer and sedatives - Treatment of complications; counseling; individual and group therapy
Commonly used Stimulants • Nicotine • Caffeine • Cocaine – Freebase/crack • Amphetamine/Methamphetamine • Methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA) • Appetite suppressants • (e.g. phentermine and diethylpropion)
Psychostimulants The most common psychostimulants (cocaine, MDMA and amphetamine) act on the synapse to increase the activity of dopamine, noradrenaline and serotonin. Cocaine blocks pre-synaptic reuptake