Download - Addiction medicine

Transcript
Page 1: Addiction medicine

Addiction-Medicine: An Overview

Ramkumar G. S. MD

Dept. of Psychiatry.

Page 2: Addiction medicine

Slide 2 of 25

Over view of presentation

Why do people take drugs and why some of them become addicted?

Neurobiological understanding of addiction. Alcohol Use Disorder. Treatment processes in deaddiction care/

drugs used/psychotherapy.

Page 3: Addiction medicine

Slide 3 of 25

Why use drugs?

Is it simply a search for fun?

Image courtesy: Google images

Page 4: Addiction medicine

Slide 4 of 25

Why use drugs?

many people also take drugs to feel comfortably numb.

Feel pleasantly drowsy. Feel full of energy and confidence. As a self administered medicine for negative

emotional states, aversive states like drug withdrawal

Feel normal Peer pressure

Page 5: Addiction medicine

Slide 5 of 25

Why use drugs?

Individual development (Thrill seeking predispositions, impulsive temperament)

Social background. Unidentified disorders of mood. Unopposed and chronic stress responses. Genetic predisposition.

Page 6: Addiction medicine

Slide 6 of 25

Why use drugs?

In a “Drug using career” different motivations may become dominant at different point of time.

Different perspectives – molecular, genetic, pharmacological, psychological, Social.

Page 7: Addiction medicine

Slide 7 of 25

Alcoholism

Substance use. Problematic use. Substance misuse. Abuse. Harmful use. Addiction

Dependence Spectrum

Page 8: Addiction medicine

Slide 8 of 25

Page 9: Addiction medicine

Slide 9 of 25

Addiction/Dependence

PHYSICAL vs Psychological Dependence

Conditioning to Pathological neuroadaptation…..

Page 10: Addiction medicine

Slide 10 of 25

Neurobiology of addiction.Reward circuitry

Neurotransmitters involved Dopamine, Endogenous opoids

+ve reinforcement, compulsive drug seeking behaviour

Pleasure seeking

Neuroadaptive process… an altered biological homeostasis

Involvement of stress hormones like NYP and CRP

-ve reinforcement, craving, tolerance, salience in drug usage

Page 11: Addiction medicine

Slide 11 of 25

Neuroadaptation (+ve reinforcement) in Chronic alcohol use

Page 12: Addiction medicine

Slide 12 of 25

Mu opoid receptor

Page 13: Addiction medicine

Slide 13 of 25

Neuroadaptation (-ve reinforcement) in Chronic alcohol use

CRF/Glutamate tone is upregulated

NYP/GABA is down regulated.

Alcohol is neuro inhibitory/depressant/ anxiolyticGlutamate is excitatoryGABA is inhibitoryCRF stress promotingNYP stress reducing

Page 14: Addiction medicine

Slide 14 of 25

Changing pattern of motivation in a “drug using career”

Page 15: Addiction medicine

Slide 15 of 25

AUD

Heterogenous disorder eg. Type 1 and 2 Course: remission and relapse. Disease management approach rather than

the cure approach in acute illness. Chronic illness needing long term long

intensity treatment with brief high intensity treatment for relapse and on the front end of the abstience process.

Page 16: Addiction medicine

Slide 16 of 25

Treatment approach

Detoxification Pharmacological detoxification treatment.

Psychological Treatment.

Pharmacology for reversing pathological neuroadaptation.

Maintenance treatment

Page 17: Addiction medicine

Slide 17 of 25

Containing the withdrawal response by detoxification Withdrawal symptoms arise

when alcohol is being used regularly and withdrawn rapidly.

Excitatory glutamatergic tone. Delerium tremens Treatment is via sedation with

adequate dosage of benzodiazepines, Thiamine supplementation.

Page 18: Addiction medicine

Slide 18 of 25

Reversing pathological neuroadaptation. With appropriate help, withdrawing from

alcohol is not the dependent drinkers’s main difficulty.

The main difficulty is avoiding relapse into further problematic drinking or dependence.

Differentiation of physical vs psychological dependence as therapeutic implications.

Page 19: Addiction medicine

Slide 19 of 25

Drugs.

Page 20: Addiction medicine

Slide 20 of 25

Psychological therapy

Motivational enhancement therapy.(MET) 12 Step facilitation program/ AA group. Relapse prevention. Craving management. Cognitive Behavioural therapy ( dealing with

high risk situation, contingency management, community reinforcement techniques)

Social skills training, Behavioural contracting, Behavioral Family therapy.

Page 21: Addiction medicine

Slide 21 of 25

MET (stages of changer model- Miller)

Page 22: Addiction medicine

Slide 22 of 25

Off label drugs in AUD

Topiramate Buspirone Fluoxetine Ondansetron Baclofen

Page 23: Addiction medicine

Slide 23 of 25

Page 24: Addiction medicine

Slide 24 of 25

Page 25: Addiction medicine

Slide 25 of 25

Summary. Addiction which sets in because of the conditioning

effects of the self reinforcing reward sensations associated with substance use.

It is maintained by the underlying neuro-adaptive process that sets in.

There are biological, psychological and social vulnerabilities that directly influence it in addition to the environment.

Effective treatment takes on a bio-psycho-social-spiritual approach.

Matching treatment to the person.

Page 26: Addiction medicine

Slide 26 of 25

Sources:

Oxford textbook of Psychiatry. Medscape Psychiatry, July 22,2014, What is

Addiction? by Denck E Vergne MD Psychiatric Times, Nov 2, 2012, Advances

and challenges in treating alcohol dependence by Hellen M Pattinatti PhD

Other internet resources.