Alcohol and substance misuse | Flashcards
According to ICD-10, what is the 2-step approach in the diagnosis of mental and behavioural disorders due to psychoactive substance abuse?
- Specify the substance or class of substance
a. Alcohol
b. Opioids
c. Cannabinoids
d. Sedative or hypnotics
e. Cocaine
f. Stimulants (inc. caffeine)
g. Hallucinogens
h. Solvents
i. Multiple drug use - Specify the type of disorder
a. Acute intoxication
b. Harmful use
c. Dependence syndrome
d. Withdrawal state
e. Withdrawal state with delirium
f. Psychotic disorder
g. Amnestic disorder
h. Other mental and behavioural disorders (e.g. dementia)
What is the definition of acute intoxication?
- Transient physical and mental abnormalities occurring shortly after administration and caused by the direct effects of the psychoactive substance.
- Acute intoxication may cause disturbances in the level of consciousness, cognition, perception, affect, behaviour or other psychophysiological functions.
- The effects are specific and characteristic for each substance (e.g. disinhibition with alcohol, visual and sensory distortions with LSD).
What is the definition of harmful use?
The continuation of substance use despite evidence of damage to the user’s physical or mental health or to their social, occupational or familial well-being. The damage may be denied or minimised by the individual concerned.
What is the definition of withdrawal?
- Where there is physical dependence on a drug, abrupt cessation or partial withdrawal of the substance generally leads to withdrawal symptoms.
- Clinically significant withdrawal symptoms are recognised in dependence on alcohol, opiates, benzodiazepines, cocaine and amphetamines.
- Withdrawal syndromes can be simple or complicated by the development of seizures, delirium or psychotic symptoms.
What is the definition of tolerance?
Over time, the user finds that more of the drug must be taken to achieve the same intensity of pleasurable effects. They may attempt to combat increasing tolerance by choosing a more rapidly acting route of administration (e.g. intravenous rather than smoking).
What is dependence syndrome?
The dependence syndrome comprises a cluster of physiological, behavioural and cognitive phenomena relevant to a person’s relationship with a particular substance or class of substance.
The core features are:
1. Primacy
-The drug and need to obtain it becomes the most important things in the person’s life taking priority over all other responsibilities, activities and interests
2. Continued use despite negative consequences
3. Loss of control of consumption
4. Narrowing of the repertoire
-The user moves from using a range of psychoactive substances to a single drug taken in preference to all others. Over time, the user tends to take the drug in the same setting with the same individuals and uses the same route of administration
5. Rapid reinstatement of dependent use after abstinence
-when the user relapses to drug use after a period of abstinence they are at risk of rapidly returning to the pattern of dependent use in a much shorter period of time
6. Tolerance and withdrawal
What is substance induced psychotic disorder?
- The individual presents with psychotic symptoms (e.g. hallucinations and/or delusions) which occur as a direct result of substance-induced neurotoxicity.
- Psychotic features may develop either during intoxication or withdrawal states or on a background of chronic harmful or dependent use.
- It can be difficult to differentiate diagnostically between these individuals and those presenting with a primary psychotic illness
Around what % of men and women consume alcohol in the UK?
M - 93%
F - 87%
Around how many people in the UK drink more than the recommended daily units?
9 million
What % of M and F are dependent on alcohol?
M 9%
F 4%
What is the most common alcohol-related death?
alcoholic liver disease
What is the estimated cost of alcohol harm to society per year?
£21 billion per year
How many grams of pure ethanol is 1 unit?
8g
What is the recommended weekly alcohol allowance for an adult male and female?
14 units
- no more than three units in any one day and have at least two alcohol-free days a week
What are the biological causes of alcohol misuse (3)?
- Genetics - but no specific causative genes have been found
- x7 more likely if first degree relatives have alcohol problems
- Children of alcohol-dependent parents have an increased risk of development of alcohol misuse problems themselves even when adopted into families without alcohol problems
What are the psychological causes of alcohol misuse (3)?
- Mental illness (including depression, anxiety disorders and schizophrenia) increases risk
- Stress, high social anxiety levels and low self-esteem are particularly associated with alcohol misuse
- Psychological theories of negative and positive reinforcement can be applied to alcohol misuse.
What are the negative reinforcement
,
What are the social/occupational causes of alcohol misuse (6)?
- More common in men but increased in women
- Higher in deprived socio-economic classes
- Alcoholmore affordable now
- Social isolation
- Loss of spouse
- Certain professions e.g. bartending, farming, medical professionals
What are some medical complications of alcohol misuse?
- Neurological
- Cardiovascular
- Hepatic
- Gastro-oesophageal
- Pancreas
- Small and large bowel
Neurological
- Cognitive and memory impairment
- Wernicke-Korsakoff Syndrome
- Alcoholic peripheral neuropathy and myopathy
Cardiovascular
- Alcoholic cardiomyopathy
- Arrhythmias (especially atrial fibrillation)
- Hypertension
- Cerebrovascular events (especially haemorrhagic strokes)
Hepatic
- Alcoholic liver disease
- Fatty liver
- Alcoholic hepatitis
- Cirrhosis occurs as end-stage of the 2 above
Gastro-oesophageal
- Mallory-Weiss tears secondary to vomiting
- Oesophageal varices +/- haemorrhage
- Barretts oesophagus and oesophageal carcinoma
- Gastritis and gastric erosions
- Peptic ulcer disease +/- haemorrhage
- Gastric carcinoma
Pancreas
1. Acute/chronic pancreatitis
Small and large bowel
- Malabsorption
- Chronic diarrhoea
- Risk factor for lower GI carcinoma
What psychiatric complications is alcohol misuse associated with (6)?
- Alcoholic hallucinosis
- Alcohol-related brain damage
- Pathological jealousy
- Anxiety and depressive disorders
- Suicide
- Schizophrenia
What is alcoholic hallucinosis? What symptoms does the patient experience?
- Substance-induced psychotic illness which is a rare complication of prolonged heavy alcohol use.
- Usually experience hallucinations (usually auditory) in clear consciousness while sober
- The auditory hallucinations may begin as “elemental hallucinations” such as banging or murmuring sounds but, with ongoing alcohol use, progress to formed voices.
What are the ddx of alcoholic hallucinosis (2)?
- Acute psychotic episode
2. Delirium tremens - in a confusional state
What is the prognosis of alcoholic hallucinosis?
in 95%, there is spontaneous resolution of symptoms after cessation of alcohol use
What are features of alcoholic related brain damage (ARBD)?
- Alcohol-related cognitive impairment and dementia
- 60% of chronic heavy drinkers will display some degree of cognitive impairment on cognitive testing while sober
- Impairment of short-term memory, long-term recall, new skill acquisition, executive functioning, but with relative preservation of IQ and language skills.
- CT/MRI shows cortical and subcortical atrophy with prominent white matter loss
What is pathological jealousy?
How do they present?
- Monosymptomatic delusional disorder seen most commonly secondary to current or previous heavy alcohol misuse
- Presents with the primary delusion that his partner or spouse has or is being unfaithful. They may go to great lengths to obtain “evidence” of infidelity
- Significant association with violence and even homicide towards the supposedly unfaithful partner
What is the relationship between alcohol and anxiety/depressive disorders?
- Two-way relationship
- Symptoms such as low mood, generalised anxiety, social phobia and panic attacks are frequently reported in alcohol abusers.
- Individuals may have a primary mood or neurotic illness and be using alcohol to self-medicate, however chronic alcohol use has a direct depressogenic effect and the cycle of drinking and withdrawal can provoke and exacerbate symptoms of anxiety
What is the relationship between suicide and alcohol?
- Alcohol misuse is associated with an increased risk of suicide (10-15%)
- Psychiatric co-morbidity, social isolation and repeated failed attempts at abstinence are risk increasing
What is the relationship between schizophrenia and alcohol?
- Rates of harmful use and dependence on alcohol are significantly higher among people with schizophrenia compared to gen pop
- Alcohol misuse in those with schizophrenia is a risk factor for psychotic relapse, re-hospitalisation, non-concordance with treatment and violence
What are the social and occupational complications of alcohol misuse (6)?
- Marital disharmony and divorce
- Domestic violence
- Missed days off work and poor work performance
- Financial and legal problems
- Risky sexual activity
- Psychological harm to family members
Which patients are at risk of acute alcohol withdrawal syndrome (AWS)?
Any patient who is dependent on alcohol who abruptly stops drinking
What are risk factors for more severe alcohol withdrawal?
- Intercurrent medical illness (e.g. infection)
- Advanced liver disease/cirrhosis
- Previous withdrawal episodes
- High amounts of alcohol
- Longer period of time of heavy drinking
What features should you look for when anticipating and prophylactically treating a patient for AWS (4)?
- Known alcohol dependence
- History of alcohol withdrawal
- Consumed >10 units alcohol for >10days
- Current withdrawal symptoms
What are the different presentations of AWS in relation to the time of the last alcoholic drink?
- Mild withdrawal - occurs 4-12 hours after last drink (lasts around 2-5 days)
- Severe withdrawal - occurs slower but lasts longer (days-weeks)
- Seizures - occurs within 6-48 hours after last drink
What are the clinical features of mild/uncomplicated alcohol withdrawal (9)?
- Coarse tremor
- Sweating
- Insomnia
- Tachycardia
- Nausea and vomiting
- Psychomotor agitation
- Anxiety
- May occasionally experience transient hallucinations (tactile or visual)
- Intense cravings for alcohol
What % of AWS are complicated by grand-mal seizures?
5-15%
What are the risk factors for seizures in AWS (4)?
- Heavy, prolonged alcohol consumption
- Previous withdrawal seizures
- Idiopathic epilepsy
- History of head injury
What are the features of severe withdrawal in AWS?
- Acute confusion
- Amnesia
- Psychomotor agitation
- Psychosis
- Delirium tremens (DTs)
How serious is a delirium tremens (DT)?
Medical emergency
How long after the last drink do DTs usually occur?
1-7 days
What % of patients get DTs?
5%
What are symptoms of a DT (6)?
- Clouding of consciousness and disorientation to time, place and person
- Amnesia for recent events
- Hallucinations (visual, tactile and auditory) and delusions
- often insects crawling up skin - Severe psychomotor agitation and tremor
- Fever
- Autonomic disturbances and electrolyte imbalances
plus symptoms of uncomplicated withdrawal
What is the mortality of DT if left untreated?
40%
What is a ddx of DT (3)?
- Alternative cause of delirium
- Head injury
- Hepatic/Wernicke encephalopathy
What are the key components of the management of AWS?
- Medications (Benzodiazepines) for symptomatic relief
- Nutritional and vitamin supplementation
- Close monitoring for severe physical and psychiatric complications throughout the withdrawal period
How do you choose whether AWS is treated as an outpatient or inpatient setting?
Outpatient:
- Preferred as relatively inexpensive
- Research indicates that outcomes (such as patient concordance and abstinence at 6 months following treatment) are comparable to inpatient detoxification treatment
Inpatient should be considered for patients with:
- Past history of severe and complicated withdrawals (e.g. seizures, delirium)
- Current psychiatric symptoms: delirium, confusion, psychosis, suicidality
- Co-morbid physical illness, severe malnutrition or frailty
- Severe nausea and vomiting or biochemical abnormalities
What is the pharmacological management of AWS?
A reducing regime of benzodiazepines for patients with:
- Active symptoms of withdrawal
- History of dependence syndrome
- Consumption of greater than 10 units/day over the previous 10 days
Which benzodiazepine is usually used for AWS and why?
Chlordiazepoxide - lower abuse potential
How many days does the patient benzodiazepine reducing regime last for in AWS treatment?
How many x a day?
7 days - usually 4x a day and dose lowers each day
What needs to be done while a patient is on the reducing regime for AWS and after?
- Closely monitored for breakthrough symptoms - additional meds may need to be prescribed.
- Supplements with thiamine and multivitamins as they are often deficient
- Follow up after
- Psychosocial interventions after
What are Wernicke’s encephalopathy and Korsakoff psychosis?
Represent the acute (Wernicke’s) and chronic (Korsakoff) phases of a single disease process - Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome - which is caused by neuronal degeneration secondary to thiamine (vitamin B1). The syndrome is most commonly seen in heavy drinkers.
What is the cause of Wernicke’s encephalopathy?
Occurs secondary to thiamine (vitamin B1) deficiency.