substance -related and addictive disorders 1. the substances include ten classes of drugs;...
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Substance -related and Addictive Disorders
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Substance -related and Addictive Disorders
The substances include ten classes of drugs;Alcohol SedativesCaffeine Hypnotics and anxiolytics
Cannabis StimulantsHallucinogens Tobacco and unknown substances
InhalantsOpioids
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Substance -related and Addictive Disorders
The substance related disorders are divided into two main groups:
Substance use disorders
Substance induced disorders
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Substance -related and Addictive Disorders
Substance induced include: IntoxicationWithdrawalOther substance/medication induced mental disorders including psychotic disorders, bipolar and related disorders, depressive disorders, anxiety disorders, obsessive complusive and related disorders, sleep disorders, sexual dysfunctions, delirium, and neurocognitive disorders.
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Substance -related and Addictive Disorders
Substance induced include: IntoxicationWithdrawalOther substance/medication induced mental disorders including psychotic disorders, bipolar and related disorders, depressive disorders, anxiety disorders, obsessive complusive and related disorders, sleep disorders, sexual dysfunctions, delirium, and neurocognitive disorders.
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Substance -related and Addictive Disorders
Substance Intoxication:•Is the development of a reversible substance syndrome due to the recent ingestion of a substance. •The clinically significant problematic behavioural or psychological changes associated with intoxication ( e.g. belligerence, mood lability, impaired judgment ) are attributable to the physiological effects of the substance on the central nervous system and develop during or shortly after use of the substance.
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Substance -related and Addictive Disorders
Substance Intoxication:•Intoxication is common among patients with substance use disorders but could occur in patients without a substance use disorder. •The symptoms are not attributable to another medical condition and are not better explained by another mental disorder.
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Substance -related and Addictive Disorders
Abuse Is maladaptive patterns of substance use that impairs health. Misuse could be used to refer to the same issue. The Impairment in health includes social, psychological and physical aspects of health.
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Substance -related and Addictive Disorders
DependencePsychological and physiological phenomena that are induced by repeated intake of substance. Strong desire to take the substanceThe substance becomes the sole source of satisfaction and neglect of other sources. Development of tolerancePhysical withdrawal state
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Substance -related and Addictive Disorders
Tolerance Is the state in which with repeated administration of a drug , its effect is reduced and larger doses are required to produce the same effect.
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Substance -related and Addictive Disorders
Withdrawal Refers to the problematic behavioural change with physiological and cognitive concomitants, that is due to the cessation of or reduction in, heavy and prolonged substance use. It causes clinically significant distress or impairment in social, occupational, or other important areas of functioning.
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Substance -related and Addictive Disorders
Withdrawal It is not due to another medical condition and are not better explained by mental disorder.
Individuals have an urge to readminister the substance to reduce the symptoms.
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Substance -related and Addictive Disorders
Intoxication and withdrawal frequently involve more than one substance sequentially or simultaneously. The highest prevalence rate is around 18-24 years. Substance induced mental disorders develop in the context of intoxication or withdrawal from substances of abuse, and medication-induced mental disorders are seen with the prescribed or over the counter medications that are taken at the suggested doses.
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Substance -related and Addictive DisordersAlcohol Related Disorders
Alcohol is used by ordinary people socially or on occasions without causing harm to those who drink it . However alcohol drinking behaviour might become abnormal and problematic.
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Substance -related and Addictive DisordersAlcohol Related Disorders
We can divide them into the following:1. Excessive consumption of alcohol2. Alcohol misuse3. Alcohol dependence4. Problem drinking
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Substance -related and Addictive DisordersAlcohol Related Disorders
Excessive alcohol consumptionAlso called harmful drinking or hazardous drinkingThis depends on the normal pattern of drinking in different countries. A unit of alcohol is equal to half a pint of beer, one glass of table wine, one conventional glass of sherry or port and one single bar measure of spirits. Each unit is about 8 g of alcohol.
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Substance -related and Addictive DisordersAlcohol Related Disorders
Excessive alcohol consumptionThe problem is different in different countries. It is more in men than women, more in unmarried, seperated or divorced. In the UK it is less in Muslims, Hindus and followers of the Baptist church.
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Substance -related and Addictive DisordersAlcohol Related Disorders
Alcohol misuseOccupations liable for harmful use of alcohol include chefs, kitchen porters, barmen and brewery workers, who have easy access to alcohol, executives and salesmen who entertain on expense accounts, actors and entertainers, seamen, and journalists.
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Substance -related and Addictive DisordersAlcohol Related Disorders
Alcohol dependenceThe same features of depedence on substances are applied her. Strong desire to take the substanceThe substance becomes the sole source of satisfaction and neglect of other sources. Development of tolerancePhysical withdrawal state and this is not a must for the diagnosis of dependence.
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Substance -related and Addictive DisordersAlcohol Related Disorders
Alcohol dependenceThe patient gives up all social, recreational and occupational activities are decreased because of drinking. He continues to drink despite the knowledge that that the drinking is harmful to his physical and psychological health.
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Substance -related and Addictive DisordersAlcohol Related Disorders
Alcohol dependenceThe person starts in the early twenties and increase the amount of alcohol intake and looses control despite all the harm in all the social, physical, psychological and occupational harm.
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Substance -related and Addictive DisordersAlcohol Related Disorders
The alcohol withdrawal syndromeOccurs with various severity depending on the amount and duration of drinking. The symptoms appear when the patient reduces or stops drinking. They appear early in the morning therefore they have early morning drinking.
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Substance -related and Addictive DisordersAlcohol Related Disorders
The alcohol withdrawal syndromeHe becomes more secretive about drinking, hides bottles and does not declare the amount he drinks. They develop tremor ‘ the shakes’, restlessness, startle and avoids facing people. Nausea, retching, and sweating are common. Insomnia is common and all those symptoms disappear when he drinks.
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Substance -related and Addictive DisordersAlcohol Related Disorders
The alcohol withdrawal syndromeThe withdrawal continues and if the patient is not treated or he drinks so he develops misperception and hallucinations. Perceptions are distorted and things become distorted, frightening or funny and sounds become louder. The patient might develop withdrawal seizures and if lasted 48 hours develop delirium tremens.
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Substance -related and Addictive DisordersAlcohol Related Disorders
Complications related to alcohol:There are many complication including :Physical complications: Gastritis, peptic ulcer, esophageal varices and acute and chronic pancreatitis. Fatty infiltration of the liver, hepatitis, cirrhosis and hepatoma.
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Substance -related and Addictive DisordersAlcohol Related Disorders
Complications related to alcohol:There are many complication including :Physical complications: Peripheral neuropathy, epilepsy, and cerebellar degeneration. Dementia and head injuries.
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Substance -related and Addictive DisordersAlcohol Related Disorders
Complications related to alcohol:There are many complication including :Physical complications: Misuse is associated with hypertension and increased risk of stroke. The association with ischemic heart disease is controversial.
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Substance -related and Addictive DisordersAlcohol Related Disorders
Complications related to alcohol:There are many complication including :Physical complications: Misuse is also linked to the development of cancers of mouth, pharynx, esophagus, liver, and breast. It might lead to amenorrhea, anovulation and menopause. Fetal alcohol syndrome: facial abnormality, small stature, low birth weight, low intelligence and overactivity.
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Substance -related and Addictive DisordersAlcohol Related Disorders
Complications related to alcohol:There are many complication including :Psychiatric complications: Idiosyncratic alcohol intoxication occurs with a small amount of alcohol consumption and marked by aggression. Memory blackouts and short term amnesiaDelirium tremens.
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Substance -related and Addictive DisordersAlcohol Related Disorders
Delirium tremensOccurs in people after prolonged and heavy drinking. The patient stops drinking or reduces the amount and develops this condition.Clouding of consciousness, disorientation, impairment of recent memory, illusions and hallucinations, agitation, restlessness,
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Substance -related and Addictive DisordersAlcohol Related Disorders
Delirium tremensinsomnia, tremor and fumbling with things, sweating, tachycardia, fever, and raised blood pressure, dilated pupils, electrolyte disturbance, leucocytosis and impaired liver function.It is worse at night and there is high risk of mortality. The patient forgets all the condition after recovery.
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Substance -related and Addictive DisordersAlcohol Related Disorders
Complications related to alcohol:Other psychiatric complications :•Alcoholic dementia•Personality deterioration•Mood and anxiety disorders •Suicidal behaviour ( more in young men, impulsivity, negative affect, and hopelessness)
•Morbid jealousy •Alcoholic hallucinosis
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Substance -related and Addictive DisordersAlcohol Related Disorders
Complications related to alcohol:There are many complication including :Social complications:Marital and family problems Occupational difficulties Road traffic accidentsViolation of law
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Substance -related and Addictive DisordersAlcohol Related Disorders
EtiologyThere are many theories regarding etiology and could be divided into individual and society factors.Individual factors:Genetic factors
The condition runs in families, more in monozygotic twins than dizygotic twins, and adoption studies. Genes for alcohol dependence are controversial and it is believed that those with genetically impaired activity of alcohol metabolizing enzyme are at lower risk of becoming dependents.
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Substance -related and Addictive DisordersAlcohol Related Disorders
EtiologyThere are many theories regarding etiology and could be divided into individual and society factors.Individual factors:Genetic factors
Mutations in the aldehyde dehydrogenase gene is another theory rendering the enzyme inactive.Other suggestions included dopamine D2 receptor and GABA receptor association.
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Substance -related and Addictive DisordersAlcohol Related Disorders
EtiologyThere are many theories regarding etiology and could be divided into individual and society factors.Individual factors:Other biological factors
Abnormalities that antedate and predict the development of alcohol dependence including impaired performance on cognitive tasks especially executive function. Sons of alcohol dependent men are less sensitive to the acute intoxicating effect of alcohol.
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Substance -related and Addictive DisordersAlcohol Related Disorders
EtiologyThere are many theories regarding etiology and could be divided into individual and society factors.Individual factors:Learning factorsModelling has been proposed but is not always true.Reward dependence: the ability of alcohol to give pleasure and reduce anxiety and release of dopamine in the mesolimbic pathwaysPersonality factors Those with chronic anxiety, antisocial personality and those with traits that lead to risk taking and novelty seeking. Psychiatric disordersChronic anxiety, social phobia , panic disorder , major depressive disorder , bipolar disorder and schizophrenia.
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Substance -related and Addictive DisordersAlcohol Related Disorders
EtiologyThere are many theories regarding etiology and could be divided into individual and society factors.Societal factors This is related to general consumption of the people in the society, economic control , formal and informal control
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Substance -related and Addictive DisordersAlcohol Related Disorders
TreatmentThere are tests to detect alcohol dependence:
Gamma-glutamyl-transpeptidase GGTMean corpuscular volume (MCV)Carbohydrate-deficient- transferrinBlood alcohol concentration
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Substance -related and Addictive DisordersAlcohol Related Disorders
TreatmentApproach to treatment of alcohol misuse:
Raise awareness of the problemIncrease motivation to changeSupport and advice.Withdraw alcohol ( or controlled drinking) (controversial)High intensity psychological treatments.Alcoholic AnonymousMedication (disulfiram, acomprosate)
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Substance -related and Addictive DisordersAlcohol Related Disorders
TreatmentDrinking history is taken properly Assessment of the physical, psychological and social problems. Assess factors that precipitate and maintain excessive drinkingAvoid confrontation Involve partners in the assessment
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Substance -related and Addictive DisordersAlcohol Related Disorders
Treatment
Hospitalization is necessary :
Medications used for detoxification:
Chlordizepoxide and lorazepamCarbamazepineChlormethiazoleAntipsychotics with benzodiazepinesVitamin supplements
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Substance -related and Addictive DisordersAlcohol Related Disorders
Treatment
Hospitalization is necessary :
History of DTsVery high alcohol consumptionConcomitant benzodiazepine misuseMedical or psychiatric comorbidity
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Substance -related and Addictive Disordersother substance related disorders
The etiology is multifactorial:Availability of drugs: Legally without prescriptionPrescription from doctorsIllicit sourcesPersonal factors:Broken homes, poor schools record, truancy or delinquency, traits as sensation seeking and impulsivity. History of mental illness or personality disorder in the family. Genetic factors to develop harmful use or dependence.
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Substance -related and Addictive Disordersother substance related disorders
The etiology is multifactorial:Social environment:Substance use by peers or parents, social deprivation, unemployment and homelessness.
Pharmacological factors:Drugs have a positive reinforcing property by inducing euphoria or reduce anxiety. They act on the dopamine pathway in the midbrain. These pathways form part of the physiological reward system.
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Substance -related and Addictive Disordersother substance related disorders
The etiology is multifactorial:Dependence occurs when the patient develop tolerance or has withdrawal symptoms. Patient has desire to drink and a drug seeking behaviourCraving and dysphoria is associated with altered brain function.Continued use of drugs lead to adaptive changes in GABA neurotransmission and this explains the need to increase the intake to produce the same pharmacological effect.
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Substance -related and Addictive Disordersother substance related disorders
complications of drug misuse
o The direct physical complications include intravenous drug might lead to HIV infection and hepatitis and death from heroin overdose.
o There are risks of fetal abnormalities and become dependent on the drugs. Infants develop withdrawal symptoms and are usually neglected.
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Substance -related and Addictive Disordersother substance related disorders
complications of drug misuse
o Psychiatric disorders might be comorbid with substance related disorder such as personality disorder , depression, anxiety disorders.
o The symptoms of those disorders might be result of drug misuse or the misuse could be secondary to those disorders as self medication.
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Substance -related and Addictive Disordersother substance related disorders
complications of drug misuse
Social complications include o Unemployment, motoring offences,
traffic accidents, family problems and neglect of children.
o They commit offences to obtain drugs, solicit it by prostitution or create gangs to obtain the drugs illegally.
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Substance -related and Addictive Disordersother substance related disorders
Diagnosis•It is necessary to take a proper drug history from the patient with external verification whenever possible.•We should look for signs of needle tracks, thrombosed veins and scars. •We must observe job decline, social isolation and new friends from drug culture.
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Substance -related and Addictive Disordersother substance related disorders
Diagnosis
Tips
•The patient might present with medical problems that he tries to hide being due to dependency on drugs such as colic, muscle pain, cellulitis, pneumonia, accidents, withdrawal symptoms or adverse reaction to hallucinogenic drugs.
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Substance -related and Addictive Disordersother substance related disorders
Diagnosis
Laboratories need to be equibbed with facilities to test for substances in the urine, blood, saliva and hair according to the level of services in that area.
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Substance -related and Addictive Disordersother substance related disorders
Preventiono It is important to make the youth the
focus of all the measures.o Restricting the availability of substanceso Reduction of overprescribing of
medicationo Education at schools and mass mediao dealing with family problems o Lessening social deprivationo Targeting the homeless, truant and street
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Substance -related and Addictive Disordersother substance related disorders
Treatment The aim of the treatment varies according to the patient and availability of resources. Withdrawal and detoxification alone has
no long term effect.The treatment setting could be at home
or in a special unit in the hospital .We should aim at harm reduction
therefore, we might let the patient continue with the substance aiming at minimum harm.
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Substance -related and Addictive Disordersother substance related disorders
Treatment The work needs recruiting all the
available resources in the hospital and community.
Social workers , psychologists, psychotherapists, councilors and key workers all have a share in the process.
Rehabilitation aims at abandoning the drug culture and be involved in new friendships. Patients could transferred to hostels or therapeutic communities.
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Misuse of opioids
• This group includes morphine, heroin, codeine, pethidine,and methadone.
• They have analgesic , anxiolytic and euphoriant effect.
• Many people use opioids but only some of them become dependent on it.
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Misuse of opioids
Routes of misuse include • Intravenous• Subcutaneous• Sniffing or snorting• Inhalation
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Misuse of opioids
Clinical effectEuphoria, analgesia, respiratory depressionConstipation, anorexia, low libido.Tolerance occurs with continued use but
diminishes rapidly when the use is stopped leading to intoxication with reintake of the substance.
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Misuse of opioids
Withdrawal• Craving• Restless and insomnia• Pain in the muscles and joints• Running nose and eyes• Abdominal cramps, vomiting and diarrhea• Piloerection sweating, dilated pupils and tachycardia• Thermodysregulation
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Misuse of opioids
Withdrawal Cont’• The symptoms start six hours after the last dose and
peak in 36-48 hours and then decrease in intensity.• Withdrawal causes distress but is not dangerous• Methadone which is used as a replacement in some
patients, has a longer half life, therefore the symptoms of withdrawal appear after 36 hours and peak in 3-5 days.
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Misuse of opioids
• Some studies revealed that 50% of users are abstinent after 10 years of follow up.
• Death occurs from accidental overdose, suicide and infections such as hepatitis and HIV.
• Employment , marriage and change of life circumstances help better prognosis.
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Misuse of opioids
Detoxification • This could be done jointly with the patient and
relatives .• It could be rapid or slow according to the
severity• 4 weeks of inpatient or 12 weeks of
outpatient.• Close personal contact is needed
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Misuse of opioids• Loperamide or metoclopramide for GI
symptoms.• NSAID as analgesics.• Lofexidine as α2 agonist• Methadone if necessary• Buprenorphine as partial agonist • Rapid detoxification is done with Naltrexone
with sedation or with general anesthesia.
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Misuse of anxiolytic and hypnotics
• Includes benzodiazepines, barbiturates
• They act by enhancing the inhibitory brain GABA and binding to BDZ receptors.
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Misuse of anxiolytic and hypnotic(benzodiazepines)
Withdrawal symptoms include the following:
• Anxiety, irritability, sweating, tremor and insomnia • Altered perception- depersonalization,derealization,
hypersensitivity to stimuli, abnormal body sensations and abnormal sensation of movements.
• Others: depression, suicidal behavior, seizures and DTs.
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Misuse of anxiolytic and hypnotic(Benzodiazepines)
These drugs were very popular in the 1970s and 1980s
They were prescribed by doctors and abused by the youth and anxious people.
The use has declined because of the availability of other drugs.
A significant proportion of people are dependent on alcohol and benzodiazepines.
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Misuse of anxiolytic and hypnotic(Benzodiazepines)
The dependent patients use them because of euphoriant and calming effect.
Availability of these drugs leads to their dependence.
Many of the patients who are prescribed these drugs may continue using them and become dependent on them.
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Misuse of anxiolytic and hypnotic(Benzodiazepines)
Treatment Is by gradual reduction of the drug
Counseling and support
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CannabisThe active substance is tetrahydrocannabinl.
(THC)There are cannabinoid receptors in the CNS.
Also called marijuana or grass.Intermittent use of cannabis is common in
North America and Europe and about 2.7% in one survey met the criteria of dependence.
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CannabisClinical effects
Increased enjoyment of aesthetic experiences, distortion of the perception of time and space
Red eyes, dry mouth, tachycardia, irritating cough
Dangerous driving
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CannabisAdverse effects
Irritation of the respiratory tract and carcinogenicAnxietyParanoid ideationToxic confusional statesPsychosis in clear consciousness
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Cannabis
Cannabis can modify the course of schizophreniaUsers are more likely to experience psychotic episodes and relapseUsers are more likely to develop schizophrenia than nonusersTeenagers might develop mood disorders, poor educational performance and poly drug abuse
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StimulantsAmphetamine
Clinically used for the treatment of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder ADHD and Narcolepsy
Acts by the release and blocking reuptake of Noradrenaline and Dopamine
It is used as a street drug with the name of speed or whiz.
Taken orally, smoking, intravenously and snorting
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StimulantsAmphetamine
Clinical effectsTalkativeness, overactivity, insomnia, dryness
of the mouth ,lips and nose with anorexiaDilatation of the pupils, tachycardia and
hypertensionLarger doses cause arrhythmias, severe
hypertension, CVA and shock.Higher doses cause seizures and coma.
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StimulantsAmphetamine
Clinical effectsPsychiatric effect include :Dysphoria, irritability, insomnia, confusion and
acute paranoid psychosis.
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StimulantsAmphetamine
Tolerance develops and dependents need to take higher doses.
Withdrawal symptoms (crash) : include depression, fatigue, tremor, lethargy, nightmares, suicidal ideation and intense craving.
Treatment of overdose includes sedation, antipsychotics and control of arrhythmias and hyperpyrexia
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StimulantsAmphetamines
Chronic use leads to amotivational state and apathy.Withdrawal leads to irritability, nausea, insomnia and anorexia.
Psychosocial intervention is used for management.
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StimulantsAmphetamine
Withdrawal symptoms are managed by psychological and social interventions as well as benzodiazepines.
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StimulantsCocaine
Is a stimulant drug with strong dependence It blocks the reuptake of dopamine into the
presynaptic nerve terminals and activates “reward system”
Used as injection, smoking and sniffing into the nostrils that might perforate the nasal septum.
Crack is a street drug with a very rapid onset of action.
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StimulantsCocaine
Clinical effects include:Excitement, increased energy, euphoriaGrandiose thinking, impaired judgment, sexual
disinhibition, hallucinations, paranoid ideation and aggressive behavior.
Formication “ cocaine bugs”Tachycardia, hypertension Cardiac arrhythmias,
dilated pupils, myocardial infarction and cardiomyopathy
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StimulantsCocaine
Withdrawal “crash” include:Dysphoria, anhedonia, anxiety, irritability, fatigue and hypersomnolenceCraving and suicidal ideation
Treatment is by social and psychological support with benzodiazepines.
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MDMA(Ecstasy)
3,4 methylenedioxymethamphetamine Is both a stimulant and hallucinogenic It releases dopamine and 5HT Causes euphoria, sociability and intimacy. Leads to anorexia,bruxism,sweating,and
tachycardia. Hyperthermia might dangerous and death might
occur due to arrhythmias or stroke. Prolonged use leads to acute and chronic paranoid
psychosis
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Hallucinogens
Lysergic acid diethylamide(LSD)• Is the most encountered member of this group • Magic mushroom is used too.• They act as partial agonists of 5-HT₂A receptors• Initially cause sympathetic activity as tachycardia,
hypertension, and dilated pupils.• The effect starts 2 hours after consumption and Lasts 8-14 hours.
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Hallucinogenso There’s distortions or intensification of sensory perceptiono Synaesthesia: confusion between sensory modalities e.g. sounds being received as visual.o Passage of time is slowed and experiences seem to have
profound meaningo Distressing of body image o They may become dangerous and kill themselveso Tolerance occurs but withdrawal does not and dependence
is rare.
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Volatile substances(solvents,inhalants)
o A group of organic substanceso They could increase brain GABA functiono Used by youth, homeless and in gangs o Includes solvents, adhesives, petrol, cleaning fluid, aerosols,
fire extinguishers, toluene and acetoneo They are inhaled from top of bottles, clothes, plastic bags,
and sprays.o Cause stimulation of CNS and then depression and possible
hallucinations o Toxic effects include peripheral neuropathy, encephalitis and
dementia