1 / 27

SUBSTANCE RELATED DISORDERS

SUBSTANCE RELATED DISORDERS. OPIOID CANNABIS Dr Y R Bhattarai TMU. Dependence on illegal and prescribed drugs is a major problem in western countries. Many drug users take a range of drugs-”polydrug” misuse. Commonly misused drugs

lea
Télécharger la présentation

SUBSTANCE RELATED DISORDERS

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. SUBSTANCE RELATED DISORDERS • OPIOID • CANNABIS Dr Y R Bhattarai TMU

  2. Dependence on illegal and prescribed drugs is a major problem in western countries.Many drug users take a range of drugs-”polydrug” misuse Commonly misused drugs • Benzodiazepines Barbiturates • Opiates Amphetamines • Cannabis Cocaine • Hallucinogens Ecstasy(MDMA) • Organic solvents Anabolic steroids

  3. Opiates misuse • The words opiate and opioid come from the word opium, the juice of the opium poppy, • Papaver somniferum, which contains approximately 20 opium alkaloids, including morphine.

  4. Natural Alkaloid of Opium Synthetic compounds • Morphine • Codeine • Thebaine • Noscapine • Papaverine • Heroin • Nalorphine • Hydromorphone • Methadone • Dextropropoxyphene • Meperidine • Cyclazocine • Levallorphan • Diphenoxylate

  5. The most important dependence producing derivatives are morphine and heroin • Apart from parenteral mode of administration, heroin can also be smoked or chased (chasing the dragon),in an impure form called smack, brown sugar • Tolerance of heroin occurs rapidly within a week and can be increased to more then 100 times then the first dose needed • Heroin gives a rapid intensely pleasurable experience, often accompanied by heightened sexual arousal

  6. Epidemiology • The current heroin users 600,000 and 800,000. • 3 million ~ lifetime users • The male/female : 3/1 • About 90 percent of persons with opioid dependence have an additional psychiatric disorder • 15 % of persons with opioid dependence attempt to commit suicide at least once. • About 50 %of urban heroin users are children of single parents or divorced parents

  7. Complications of chronic opioid use • Feeling of warmth, heaviness of the extremities, dry mouth, itchy face and facial flushing in IV users • The initial euphoria is followed by a period of sedation • The physical effects of opioids include respiratory depression, pupillary constriction, smooth muscle contraction (including the ureters and the bile ducts), constipation, and changes in blood pressure, heart rate, and body temperature • Intravenous users are prone to bacterial infections, hepatitis B, HIV infections through needle contamination.

  8. DSM-IV-TR Diagnostic Criteria for Opioid Intoxication • Recent use of an opioid. • Clinically significant ,behavioral or psychological • Pupillary constriction and one of the following signs, developing during, or shortly after, opioid use: • drowsiness or Coma • slurred speech • impairment in attention or memory • Respiratory depression • The symptoms are not due other mental disorder

  9. Opioid Overdose • Marked unresponsiveness, coma, slow respiration, hypothermia, hypotension, and bradycardia. • When presented with the clinical triad of coma, pinpoint pupils, and respiratory depression ~ primary diagnosis

  10. DSM-IV-TR Diagnostic Criteria for Opioid Withdrawal • Either of the following: • cessation of opioid use that has been heavy and prolonged • administration of an opioid antagonist after a period of opioid use • Three (or more) of the following, developing within minutes to several days after use ( usually after 12 hours) • piloerection • muscle aches, shivering • lacrimation or rhinorrhea • sweating • diarrhea • yawning • mydriasis • Facial flushing • Hypertension & tachycardia • The symptoms clinically significant distress or impairment in social, occupational, or other important areas of functioning. • The symptoms are not due to other mental disorder

  11. Laboratory tests • Urinary opioid tests: radio-immunoassay, free radical assay technique, thin layer chromatography, high pressure chromatography, enzyme multiplied immuno-assay technique

  12. Treatment of intoxication • The first task in overdose treatment is to ensure an adequate airway. • Tracheopharyngeal secretions should be aspirated; an airway may be inserted. • Supplementary high flow oxygen should be given. • Ventilated mechanically as required. • Naloxone (short half life), the specific opioid antagonist, is administered IV at a slow rate initially about 0.8 mg per 70 kg of body weight. Initially 2mg followed by repeat injectiom in every 5-10 minutes until level of conciousness and respiratory rate increases and pupils dilate.

  13. Treatment…… • Clonidine (0.1 to 0.3 mg three to four times a day) is usually given during the detoxification period or withdrawal state to decrease blood pressure. • Naltrexone (longer half life)100mg PO every alternate day Methadone can be taken orally • Substitute addictions, longer withdrawal period. • A daily dosage of 20 to 80 mg is enough to stabilize a patient, although daily doses of up to 120 mg have been used.

  14. Cannabis-Related Disorders • Cannabis preparations are obtained from the dried leaves and flowers of Indian hemp plant Cannabis sativa, an annual herb . • Marijuana refers to any part of the plant used to induce effects , and hashish is the dried resign from the flower tips.

  15. Cannabis-Related Disorders • The primary psychoactive constituent of marijuana is delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol • When smoked, onset of action is 10-30 mins, after ingestion the onset is 1-3 hours • The cannabis plant has been used in China, India and the Middle East for approximately 8,000 years • About 33% of adults in the United States have used marijuana, and approximately 5% use it on a regular basis

  16. Clinical Features • Dilation of the conjunctival blood vessels (red eye) and mild tachycardia. • Orthostatic hypotension • Dry mouth • Euphoria, drowsiness, or sedation •   Sensation of slowed time •   Auditory or visual distortions, dissociation, acute paranoid psychosis in high dosages. • Impaired judgment, motor coordination, attention, or memory

  17. DSM-IV-TR Diagnostic Criteria for Cannabis Intoxication • Impaired motor coordination, euphoria, anxiety, sensation of slowed time, impaired judgment, social withdrawal. • Two (or more) of the following signs, developing within 2 hours of cannabis use: • conjunctival infection • increased appetite • dry mouth • tachycardia

  18. Cannabis induced disorders • Psychological dependence is common but tolerance and withdrawal symptoms are unusual. • Cannabis intoxication delirium • Cannabis-induced psychotic disorder, with delusions • Cannabis-induced psychotic disorder, with hallucinations • Cannabis-induced anxiety

  19. Complications • Many reports indicate that long-term cannabis use is associated with • Cerebral atrophy, • Seizure susceptibility, • Chromosomal damage, • Birth defects, • Impaired immune reactivity, • Alterations in testosterone concentrations, and • Dysregulation of menstrual cycles

  20. Treatment • Serious poisoning from ingestion is extremely rare • Reassurance or iv diazepam is sufficient for drug induced psychossis • Intravenous fluids for hypotension.

  21. Medical Use of Marijuana • Nausea secondary to chemotherapy, • multiple sclerosis (MS) • chronic pain, • acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS), • epilepsy, and • Glaucoma

  22. THANK YOU !

More Related