Chapter 11 Flashcards

1
Q

addiction

A
  • compulsive drug seeking and drug taking despite sever harms
  • inability to control the strong urges to consume the drug, even when there is a strong desire to quit

why people do drugs:
- source of pleasure - only small amounts of addicts are addicted due to the pleasure - dopamine (DA) lies at the centre of drug reward - every drug increases DA indirectly or directly

  • coping mechanism - involved in the maintenance of addiction - changes happen in your brain due to addiction - difficult childhoods - makes you less resistant to stress
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2
Q

Substance use disorder

A

addiction

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3
Q

Polysubstance Abuse Disorder:

A

The simultaneous misuse or dependence upon two or more substances
* Synergistic → dangerous

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4
Q

diagnostic indicators

A

Impairment of control - taking more than intended - cannot stop
* Social impairment - eg. don’t show up to work due to hangover
* Risky use - using a lot
* Pharmacological dependence - need more of the drug to achieve the same effect
* Tolerance: need increased amounts to achieve the same effect
* Withdrawal: symptoms when the substance is removed from the body

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5
Q

DSM-5 Diagnostic Criteria for Alcohol Use Disorder

mild: 2-3 symptoms
moderate: 4-5 symptoms
sever: 6 or more symptoms

A

A. A problematic pattern of alcohol use leading to clinically significant impairment or distress, as manifested by at least two of the following, occurring within a 12-month period
1. Alcohol is often taken in larger amounts or over a longer period than was intended.

  1. There is a persistent desire or unsuccessful efforts to cut down or control alcohol use.
  2. A great deal of time is spent in activities necessary to obtain alcohol, use alcohol, or recover from its effects.
  3. Craving, or a strong desire or urge to use alcohol.
  4. Recurrent alcohol use resulting in a failure to fulfill major role obligations at work, school, or home.
  5. Continued alcohol use despite having persistent or recurrent social or interpersonal problems caused or
    exacerbated by the effects of alcohol.
  6. Important social, occupational, or recreational activities are given up or reduced because of alcohol use.
  7. Recurrent alcohol use in situations in which it is physically hazardous.
  8. Alcohol use is continued despite knowledge of having a persistent or recurrent physical or psychological problem that is likely to have been caused or exacerbated by alcohol.
  9. Tolerance, as defined by either of the following:
    a. A need for markedly increased amounts of alcohol to achieve intoxication or desired effect.
    b. A markedly diminished effect with continued use of the same amount of alcohol.
  10. Withdrawal, as manifested by either of the following:
    a. The characteristic withdrawal syndrome for alcohol
    (refer to Criteria A and B of the criteria set for alcohol
    withdrawal, pp. 499–500).
    b. Alcohol (or a closely related substance, such as a
    benzodiazepine) is taken to relieve or avoid with- drawal symptoms.
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6
Q

Alcohol Withdrawal symptoms

A
  • anxiety
  • insomnia
  • fever
  • restlessness
  • nausea
  • tremors
  • delirium tremens
  • agitation
  • autonomic instability
  • gross tremor
  • confusion
  • disorientation
  • paranoia
  • hallucinations
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7
Q

effects of ethyl alcohol

A
  • alcohol is a depressant
  • Reduce anxiety, produces euphoria, sense of well-being, reduce inhibition - enhances social perception
  • Passes directly into the bloostream (BAL)
  • Breathalyzers
  • Broken down in the stomach by the enzyme alcohol
    dehydrogenase
  • Less available in women (+ higher body fat) = higher BAL
  • (this is the true nature of alcohol) Depressant: deficits in eye-hand coordination, drowsiness,
    decreased sensitivity to taste, smell, and pain, slow reaction
    time, etc.
  • Hangover symptoms
    Memory blackouts - interferes with the ability to keep new information for brief amounts of time
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8
Q

Long terms effects of alcohol

A
  • Damage to many organs
  • Risk for certain types of cancer
  • Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome
  • Thiamine deficiency
  • Treatment for thiamine deficiency is injections in the first stage
  • Chronic impairment of memory
    and loss of contact with reality
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9
Q

Wernicke-Korsakoff Syndrome
‘Wet Brain’

A
  • commonly experience confusion and disorientation and eye movement and movement abnormalities
  • extensive memory deficits - inability to form new memories
  • deficiency in vitamin thiamine - deficiency in thiamine can disrupt process of utilisation of carbohydrates for energy - and disrupt brain activity

common areas effected: hypothalamus, thamalum, cerebellum, cortex and brain stem

patients are treated with thiamine supplementation

however, generally considered irreversible

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10
Q

etiology - biological factors

A
  • genes effect the vulnerabilities in the reward system of the brain and ability to metabolise alcohol

neurobiological influences
- EEG higher rates of the fast beta wave, less change (smaller P300 amplitudes)
- Low level of serotonin
- Men with relatives with alcohol-dependent relatives: larger increases in hear rate
- Measure of sensitivity to the stimulating properties of alcohol

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11
Q

etiology - psychological factors

A

Personality
* Behavioural disinhibition, negative emotionality (depression and anxiety) - neuroticism
- impulsivity - easier to have binge episodes - unable to stop yourself - ADHD, CD - impulsivity - comorbid with substance use

Tension-reduction hypothesis
* Reinforcement - reduction in unpleasant emotions - alcohol use becomes reinforced
* Missing element: Role of expectations

Alcohol expectancy theory
* Effects largely determined on your expectations - convince yourself that the only thing that will help you relax is the alcohol - self-fulfilling prophecy
* The pharmacological effects can have the opposite effect of expectation
(depressant)

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12
Q

Etiology - socio-cultural factors

A
  • family values
  • attitudes
  • expectations
  • environment
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13
Q

medications are sometimes used in treatment of alcohol use disorders, mainly to…

A

reduce the pleasurable feelings that result from drinking

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14
Q

Pharmacotherapy

A
  • benzodiazepines - reduces anxiety due to withdrawal symptoms - can develop an addiction to benzodiazepines
  • naltrexone - antagonist drug - reduce gratification
  • reduce the sensation of craving
  • acamprosate - agonist drug - facilitates the inhibitory action of GABA
  • reduce the sensation of craving
  • Antabuse
  • making drinking aversive (eg. make someone throw up)
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15
Q

treatment - residential treatment and mutual support groups

A

Residential treatment
* Alcohol use disorder as a disease
* Minnesota Model – Hazelton treatment program
* Education
* Group and individual therapy

Alcoholics Anonymous (AA)
* AA works with more alcoholics worldwide than any
other treatment organization.
* Self-help group
* Based on the disease model
* Limited research and effectiveness data

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16
Q

psychological treatment

A

Behavioural approach:
- contingency management
- community reinforcement approach
- condition by pairing with aversive effect

Relapse prevention treatment:
- What should be identified? High-risk situations
- Why does it happen? Failure of coping strategies & self-defeating thoughts

Marital and family therapy
- with someone who is not addicted

Brief interventions and motivational interviewing
- black and white thinking - I had one drink, I might as well have many

17
Q

Depressants

A
  • barbiturates
  • benzodiazepines
18
Q

CNS depression

A

tense to calm:
- tranquillisers
- anti-anxiety meds
- anxiolytics

calm to drowsy:
- sedatives
- reduce the desire for physical activity

drowsy to sleep:
- hypnotics
- CNS depressants and Meds used for sleep
- barbiturates
- benzodiazepines

19
Q

Barbiturates and Benzodiazepines

A
  • There are a number of drugs considered to be depressants because they inhibit neurotransmitter activity in the CNS.
  • Barbituric acid, produced in 1903, was one of the first drugs
    developed to treat anxiety, tension, and sleep issues.
  • Addictive
  • Benzodiazepines (‘anti-anxiety’ meds) can take many forms:
  • Tranquilizers, sedatives, hypnotics, muscle relaxants, anticonvulsants
  • safer alternative to barbituric, still do have addictive potential
  • inhibits reticular activating system
  • Combination of depressants is dangerous
  • inhibition of limbic system
  • reduces anxiety
20
Q

Facts about Barbiturates &
Benzodiazepines

A

Prevalence of usage
* 10% of the general population (more women)
* High-school students: 1.3% males, 3% females

Effects
* (-) Mild euphoria
* (+) Slurred speech, poor motor coordination, impaired
judgment + concentration
* Long-term: depression, chronic fatigue, mood swings, paranoia

Treatment for a dependency
* Progressively smaller doses of the addictive drug to minimize
withdrawal symptoms
* Abstinence syndrome: insomnia, headaches, and body ache
* Psychological and educational programs (Narcotics
Anonymous)

21
Q

Hallucinogens

A
  • Drugs that change a person’s mental state by inducing perceptual
    and sensory distortions or hallucinations.
  • Excitatory effects on the CNS
  • Mimic the effects of serotonin
  • LSD affects the sympathetic nervous system
  • Flashbacks
  • Psychedelics – “soul” and “to make manifest”
  • Albert Hoffman – 1938
  • LSD
  • Mushrooms
  • Psilocybe mexicana
22
Q

common side effects of LSD

A
  • dramatic changes in sensations and feelings
  • altered sense of self
  • swing rapidly from one emotion to another
  • feeling several different emotions at once
  • altered sense of time
  • crossover senses - synesthesia
23
Q

hallucinogens - dependancy

A
  • psychological
  • hallucinogens are believed to have little addictive potential
  • few programs have been developed for treatment
24
Q

hallucinogens as antidepressants?

A
  • Serotoninergic hallucinogens are agonists at frontal and limbic 5-HT2A
    receptors.
  • Ex. lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD), dimethyltryptamine (DMT) and psilocybin
  • Controlled trials with these drugs report anxiolytic and antidepressive
    effects + antiaddictive effects
  • Biological mechanisms include neuroplasticity and fronto-limbic activation.
  • Psychological mechanisms include enhanced social cognition and
    openness to experience.