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Introduction to Drugs of Abuse

Introduction to Drugs of Abuse. Cory Campbell, M.D., Ph.D. Neuropsychiatric Institute and Hospitals, UCLA. Introduction to Drugs of Abuse. Diagnosis Terminology Commonly abused substances Demographics Epidemiology. Substance Abuse: DSMIV Criteria.

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Introduction to Drugs of Abuse

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  1. Introduction to Drugs of Abuse Cory Campbell, M.D., Ph.D. Neuropsychiatric Institute and Hospitals, UCLA

  2. Introduction to Drugs of Abuse • Diagnosis • Terminology • Commonly abused substances • Demographics • Epidemiology

  3. Substance Abuse: DSMIV Criteria • Maladaptive pattern of substance use leading to clinically significant impairment or distress, manifested by one (or more) of the following within a 12-month period: • Failure to fulfill major role obligations • Use in situations that is physically hazardous • Legal problems • Social/interpersonal problems due to substance (Has not met criteria for substance dependence)

  4. Substance Dependence: DSMIV Criteria • A maladaptive pattern of substance use, leading to clinically significant impairment or distress, as manifested by three (or more) of the following within a 12-month period: • Tolerance • Withdrawal • Larger amounts, longer period than intended

  5. Substance Dependence: DSMIV Criteria • Attempts to cut down or control use • Great deal of time to obtain substance or recover from its effects • Social, occupational, recreational activities compromised • Knowledge of problems doesn’t thwart use (specifier: with or without physiological dependence)

  6. Defining “addiction” • Physiologic: tolerance and withdrawal • Psychologic: compulsive use, loss of control (i.e., psychological dependence) • Some use “addicted” to mean psychological dependence and “dependent” to mean tolerance and withdrawal (i.e., physiologic dependence) • DSMIV incorporates both

  7. Defining “addiction” “…a compulsion to take the drug with a loss of control in limiting intake and a withdrawal syndrome that results in physical as well as motivational signs of discomfort when the drug is removed.” (Koob, 2000)

  8. Defining “Reinforcement” • Reinforcer: any event that increases the probability of a response. This definition can also be used to signify a definition for reward, and the two words are often used interchangeably. However, reward often connotes some additional emotional value such as pleasure (Koob, 2000).

  9. Commonly Abused Substances • Alcohol • Nicotine • Stimulants (Amphetamines, Cocaine/Crack, MDMA) • Opioids

  10. Commonly Abused Substances • Sedative-Hypnotics (Benzodiazepines, Barbiturates) • Hallucinogens (PCP, ketamine, LSD, Cannabis, Mescaline, Psylocybin) • Caffeine • Inhalants (Nitrous Oxide, Nitrites)

  11. Commonly Abused Substances • Antihistamines/Anticholinergics • OTC/Dextromethorphan • Anabolic Steroids • Gamma Hydroxybutyrate • Flunitrazepam (Rohypnol)*

  12. Routes of administration • PO • IV • Insufflation (“Snort”) • Inhale • Transdermal • SC (“Skin Popping”) • SL

  13. Monitoring the Future Study • Broad decline in use • Most significant decline: MDMA by about 50% from 2001 in all grades studied • Increase in inhalants by 8th graders’ annual prevalence from 7.7% to 8.7% • Non-significant increase in Oxycontin, Vicoden all three grades

  14. Alcohol • Monitoring the Future Study: 41% of high school seniors binge drank in 1983 vs. 28% in 1992, lowest of any illicit drug use, and rose again to 32% in 1998. No remarkable change since then.

  15. Methamphetamine • Monitoring the Future Study (2003): 1.9% annual prevalence for 12th graders, a decline from 3.7% in 1981. • National Household Survey on Drug Abuse: 4.9 million had tried methamphetamine at least once in their lifetimes (2.3 percent of population vs. a non-significant increase from 4.7 million people (2.2 percent) in the 1995.

  16. Methamphetamine • Community Epidemiology Work Group: Methamphetamine is the dominant illicit drug problem in San Diego. San Francisco and Honolulu also have substantial methamphetamine-using populations. Patterns of increasing use have been seen in Denver, Los Angeles, Minneapolis, Phoenix, Seattle, and Tucson.

  17. Cocaine • In 1997, an estimated 1.5 million were chronic cocaine users vs. an estimate of 5.7 million users in 1985 (NIDA report). • Monitoring the Future Study (2003): 4.8% annual prevalence for 12th graders, a decline from 12.7% in 1986.

  18. Cocaine • Community Epidemiology Work Group: Most cocaine users are older, inner-city crack addicts. New users: teenagers smoking crack with marijuana; Hispanic crack users in Texas; and in Atlanta, middle-class suburban users and female crack users in their thirties with no prior drug history.

  19. Heroin • Monitoring the Future Survey (2003): heroin use is almost 50% lower than recent peak rates in 8th, 10th and 12th grade students (1.5% lifetime prevalence). • National Household Survey on Drug Abuse: From 1995 to 2002, the rate among those 12 to 17 increased from 0.1 to 0.4 percent; among those age 18 to 25, the rate rose from 0.8 to 1.6 percent.

  20. Heroin • Community Epidemiology Work Group: In June 2003, CEWG members reported that heroin indicators were relatively stable, but maintained high levels in Boston, Chicago, Detroit, Newark, Philadelphia, and San Francisco.

  21. “Club Drugs” • MDMA • Ketamine • GHB • Flunitrazepam • Methamphetamine

  22. Street Names • LSD: cubes, microdot, boomers • PCP: boat, hog, peace pill • Codeine: Captain Cody, schoolboy • Heroin: skag, skunk • Oxycontin: killer

  23. Street Names • Cannabis: boom, chronic, blunt • Benzodiazepines: candy, tranks • Flunitrazepam: R2, roofies, rope, forget me pill • GHB: G, Georgia home boy, liquid X, grievous bodily harm

  24. Street Names • Methamphetamine: tina, crank, glass, ice • Cocaine: Charlie, flake • MDMA: Adam, Eve • Ritalin: R-ball, Vitamin R, skippy, the smart drug

  25. Topics To Follow • Genetics • Treatment (pharmacologic, nonpharmacologic) • Comorbidity/Dual Diagnosis • Animal Models • Epidemiology/Demographics

  26. Conclusion • Accurate diagnosis is critical • Knowledge of pharmacology important in understanding drug-specific syndromes and treatment • Although substance dependence is generally declining, still remarkable • Animal models are valuable tool to investigate substance dependence

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