Substance Abuse
Substance Abuse
Substance Abuse
DEFINITION OF TERMS:
• Use – when a person drinks alcohol or swallows, smokes, sniffs, or
injects a mind-altering substance
• Abuse – when a person is using alcohol or drugs for the purpose of
intoxication or, in the case of prescription drugs, for the purpose
beyond their intended use
• Dependence – the continuing use of alcohol or drugs despite
adverse consequences to one’s physical, social and psychological
well-being
• Addiction – describes that state when the person experiences
severe psychological and behavioral dependence on drugs or alcohol
• Intoxication – use of substance that results in maladaptive
behavior
• Withdrawal – is the adverse physical and psychological symptoms
that occur when the person ceases using a substance
• Tolerance – the need for greatly increased amounts of substance
to obtain desired effect
• Detoxification – the process of safely and effectively withdrawing
a person from an addictive substance, usually under medical
supervision
DIAGNOSTIC CRITERIA:
• Maladaptive pattern of substance use leading to clinically significant
impairment or distress
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• Impairment manifested by three or more of the following occurring
within a 12 month-period
A. Failure to fulfill major role obligations at work, school, or home
B. Recurrent substance use in hazardous situations
C. Recurrent substance-related legal problems
D. Continued substance use despite problems
ETIOLOGY:
A. Biological theory
• Genetic factors: incidence of alcohol abuse in the children of
alcoholics is four times greater than in the general population
• Biochemical factors:
B. Psychological Theory
• Family dynamics: children of alcoholics are four times as likely to
develop alcoholism
• Inconsistent parental behavior, poor role modeling, and lack of
nurturing
• Maladaptation in early stage of development leads to oral fixation in
dependent personality – relief from guilt and shame is sought by
taking substance
C. Sociocultural theory
• Hopelessness and defeat of living conditions (poverty and related
problems) leading to the use of substances for relief
• Peer pressure, especially during adolescence when individual is most
vulnerable to pressure from peer group
• Easy availability of substances combined with attitude that substance
use is viable method of stress relief
• Societal ambivalence about use of substances, partially validating
message that medicine solves problems
D. Behavioral Theory
• Substance use is a response to stressful stimuli; use is reinforced
because substances effectively provide temporary relief of anxiety
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A. Alcohol
1. Central Nervous System (CNS) Depressant
a. Immediate Effects due to action on brain (acute
intoxication) – causes slurred speech, incoordination, unsteady
gait, impaired attention and memory. High doses may cause
stupor and coma
b. Overdose: respiratory depression and cardiac arrest
c. Chronic use causes multisystem dysfunction
• Intoxication: blood alcohol level 0.15 (150 mg
alcohol/100cc blood)
• Legal level: 0.08 – 0.10
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f. Avoid alcohol, including ingestion of elixirs (drug
preparation that use alcohol), topical application
(mouthwash, lotions, liniment, shaving cream) and
inhalation (paints and varnishes)
6. Treatment of withdrawal
a. Anxiolytics such as chlordiazepoxide (Librium) and oxazepam
(Serax) administered over 5 to 7 days in gradually decreasing
doses
b. Anticonvulsant such as phenytoin (Dilantin) or carbamezapine
(Tegretol) for seizure prevention. Magnesium sulfate can also
be used for seizure prevention caused by magnesium
deficiency
c. Use of measures to promote adequate nutrition and fluid and
electrolyte balance
• Vitamin supplementation including multivitamin
preparation , vitamin B1 (Thiamin) and folic acid
• Balanced diet with supplements as necessary
• Symptomatic treatment of nausea and vomiting
• Increased fluid intake
C. Cocaine
1. CNS Stimulant and dopamine depletion
a. Immediate Effects due to action on CNS causes euphoria, anxiety,
anger; impaired judgment and paranoid thinking, tachycardia,
dilated pupils; elevated blood pressure; insomnia
b. Chronic use can lead to tolerance with need for increased amount
of drug
c. Can also cause chronic fatigue, irritability, anxiety, mental
confusion, paranoia, suicidal depression, infectious disease
related to intravenous use
d. Can cause symptoms of runny nose or damaged mucous
membranes from chronic snorting cocaine
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2. Commonly abused drug forms include: cocaine powder (snorted or
injected), and crack crystal a cocaine derivative (smoked)
3. Withdrawal is characterized by: severe depression, fatigue, vivid
dreams and hypersomnia or insomnia, psychomotor agitation
4. Treatment of Withdrawal
a. Anxiolytics to treat psychomotor agitation
b. Antidepressants to counteract depression
c. Beta-adrenergic blockers to treat hypertension and tachycardia
d. Dopamine receptor agonist such as bromocryptine (Parlodel) to
decrease cocaine craving from dopamine depletion
5. Crosses placental barrier causing fetal addiction possibly brain
damage, and seizure disorders in infants
D. Cannabis – pot or hashish
1. Alters sensory perception due to active ingredient,
tetrahydrocannibol (THC), which is a psychoactive substance
a. Immediate effects: euphoria, sensation of slowed time, impaired
motor coordination, social withdrawal, conjunctival irritation(red
eyes), increased appetite, dry mouth, tachycardia
b. Chronic can cause decreased testosterone levels in males;
may also cause a chronic lung disease (emphysema and lung
cancer)
2. Commonly abused drug forms include marijuana and hashis
3. Possible symptoms of withdrawal: irritability and anxious mood
accompanied by physiologic changes such as tremor, perspiration,
nausea, and sleep disturbance
4. Crosses placental barrier – increases risk of low birth weight and
smaller head circumference in infant
F. Opioids
1. CNS depressants
a. Immediate effects due to action on brain: causes euphoria,
impaired attention and memory, apparent sedation,
psychomotor retardation, increased sensitivity to pain, apathy,
pinpoint constricted pupils, slurred speech, hypothermia,
b. At high doses: respiratory depression
c. Chronic use: multiple infectious disease related to intravenous
drug use
G. Hallucinogens
1. Mind-altering drugs affecting sensory perceptions
a. Immediate effects: intensified perception; depersonalization,
heightened response to color, textures, sounds; illusions and
hallucinations; anxiety and depression; dilated pupils,
tachycardia, and sweating
b. Chronic use: paranoia. “Bad trips” may occur which can
cause panic attacks. Flashbacks can occur at unpredictable
times
c. Phencyclidine (PCP) dependence may be marked by extreme
violent behavior followed by unresponsiveness
2. Commonly abused drug types: PCP, lysergic acid (LSD), mescaline,
peyote
3. No withdrawal symptoms described
MANAGEMENT:
RESPONSIBILITY
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Emphasize the individual’s freedom of choice and
personal responsibility for change. General themes are as
follows:
a. It’s up to you; you’re free to decide to change or not
b. No one else can decide for you or force you to change
c. You’re the one who has to do it if it’s going to happen
ADVICE
Include clear recommendation on the need for change,
in a supportive and concerned rather than in a judgmental
manner.
MENU
Provide a menu of treatment options, from which
patients may pick those that seem more suitable or
appealing
EMPATHETIC COUNSELING
Show warmth, support, respect and understanding in
communication with patients.
SELF-EFFICACY
Reinforce self-efficacy, or an optimistic feeling that he
or she can change.
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10. We continued to make personal inventory, and when we
are wrong, promptly admitted them.
11. We sought trough prayer and meditation to improve our
conscious contact with God as we understood Him, praying only
for knowledge of His will and the power to carry that out.
12. Having had the spiritual awakening as a result of these
steps, we tried to carry this message and to practice these
principles in all our affairs.
• Psychotherapy
• Family therapy
• Family support groups (Al-Anon, Alateen)
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