understanding drug abuse and addiction steve hanson

71
Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

Upload: fred-cunningham

Post on 16-Dec-2015

225 views

Category:

Documents


2 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction

Steve Hanson

Page 2: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

Basic Questions

• Why do people do drugs?

• Why can’t/ won’t some people stop?

Page 3: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

Realities

People like Drugs.

We all like things faster and easier.

Page 4: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

How Drugs Work

• Interact with neurochemistry• Results:

–Feel Good – Euphoria/reward–Feel Better – reduce negative

feelings

Page 5: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

CompulsiveDrug Use

(Addiction)

VoluntaryDrug Use

Page 6: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

Addiction is a Brain Disease

Prolonged Use Changes the brain in Fundamental

and Long Lasting Ways

Page 7: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

Brain Changes

Page 8: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

Neurotransmitter Action

Release of NT

Page 9: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

Neurotransmitters

• Acetylcholine – Memory• Dopamine – Reward/Euphoria• Norepinephrine – Metabolic Rate• Serotonin – Mood, Sleep Regulation

Page 10: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

Natural Rewards

FoodWater

SexNurturing

Page 11: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

methamphetaminemarijuanaecstasyopiumetc.

Page 12: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

Food

00

5050

100100

150150

200200

00 6060 120120 180180

Time (min)Time (min)

% o

f B

asal

DA

Ou

tpu

t%

of

Bas

al D

A O

utp

ut

NAc shellNAc shell

EmptyEmpty

BoxBox FeedingFeeding

Source: Di Chiara et al.Source: Di Chiara et al.

FOODFOOD

Page 13: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

Sex

100100

150150

200200

DA

Co

nce

ntr

ati

on

(%

Bas

elin

e)

DA

Co

nce

ntr

ati

on

(%

Bas

elin

e)

MountsMountsIntromissionsIntromissionsEjaculationsEjaculations

1515

00

55

1010

Co

pu

latio

n F

req

ue

nc

yC

op

ula

tion

Fre

qu

en

cy

SampleNumberSampleNumber

11 22 33 44 55 66 77 88 99 1010 1111 12121313 1414 1515 16161717

ScrScrScrScrBasBasFemale 1 PresentFemale 1 Present

ScrScrFemale 2 PresentFemale 2 Present

ScrScr

Source: Fiorino and PhillipsSource: Fiorino and Phillips

SEXSEX

Page 14: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

Nicotine

00

100100

150150

200200

250250

00 11 22 3 hr3 hr

Time After NicotineTime After Nicotine%

of

Ba

sa

l R

ele

as

e%

of

Ba

sa

l R

ele

as

e

AccumbensAccumbensCaudateCaudate

NICOTINENICOTINE

Page 15: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

Alcohol

100

150

200

250

0 1 2 3 4hr

Time After Ethanol

% o

f B

as

al

Re

lea

se 0.25

0.512.5

Accumbens

0

Dose (g/kg ip)

Alcohol

Page 16: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

00

100100

200200

300300

400400

00 11 22 33 44 5 hr5 hrTime After CocaineTime After Cocaine

% o

f B

as

al

Re

lea

se

% o

f B

as

al

Re

lea

se

DADADOPACDOPACHVAHVA

AccumbensAccumbensCOCAINECOCAINE

00

100100

150150

200200

250250

00 11 22 33 44 5hr5hrTime After MorphineTime After Morphine

% o

f B

as

al

Re

lea

se

% o

f B

as

al

Re

lea

se

AccumbensAccumbens

0.50.51.01.02.52.5

1010

Dose (mg/kg)Dose (mg/kg)

MORPHINEMORPHINE

Source: Di Chiara and Imperato

Effects of Drugs on Dopamine Levels

Page 17: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

Source: Di Chiara and Imperato

00

100100

200200

300300

400400

500500

600600

700700

800800

900900

10001000

11001100

00 11 22 33 44 5 hr5 hr

Time After AmphetamineTime After Amphetamine

% o

f B

as

al

Re

lea

se

% o

f B

as

al

Re

lea

se

DADA

DOPACDOPAC

HVAHVA

AccumbensAccumbens METHAMPHETAMINEMETHAMPHETAMINE

Methamphetamine

Page 18: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

Behavior Pathways

• Rewarding behaviors can become routine• “Subconscious” control of the behavior• Difficult to extinguish behaviors because

people are not always aware when they are initiated.

• Resistant to change

Page 19: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

Circuits Involved In Drug Abuse and Addiction

All of these must be considered in developing strategies to effectively treat addiction

GOSTOP

Page 20: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

Go & Stop

• Craving elicits Go!! • Powerful • Activity in limbic system not frontal cortex • Feeling/reacting vs. thinking/planning• Thinking initiates Stop!!• Addicts have “bad brakes” – Stop! • Hard to stop this fast moving car.

Page 21: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

Fred Flintstone Brakes

21

Page 22: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

Craving

Trigger

Memory

Stimulation of NucleusAccumbens & Amygdala

Focus on Drug Anxiety Increases

ImpairedJudgement

Relapse

Page 23: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

AMYGDALAR CONNECTIVITY during brief .5 sec Cocaine Cues

Drug 2 amyg conx (n=7)

Placebo

Baclofen

Source: Childress, et al, unpublished

Baclofen blunts AMYGDALAR CONNECTIVITY

Page 24: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

MyelinationWhy it’s hard to change

Page 25: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

Myelination = Stronger & FasterLike Paving a Dirt Road

Page 26: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

Chemical Dependency

• Chronic Disease Prone to Relapse• Requires significant behavior

changes• Similar to Heart Disease, Diabetes,

Asthma, Gingivitis,etc.• Similar treatment “success”

Page 27: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

Relapse Happens

• Poor Craving Management• The Relapse Process – Gorski• Get the train back on the tracks

Page 28: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

Cocaine Effects

• Blocks Reuptake of DA and NE – increases activity

• Central Nervous System - Euphoria• Peripheral NS - ­­NE­Fight/Flight

–­­HR, BP, Temp, bronchodilation, dilates pupils

Page 29: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

Snorted - onset 2 mins.

Smoked - onset 5-12 seconds30-40 mins

1 hour15 mins

5 mins

Page 30: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

Dose Response

DOSE

EF

FE

CT

S

Euphoria

Psychosis

Paranoia

AnxietyEnergized

MetabolicCrisis

Page 31: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

Animal Studies

• Primates will ignore food and water in order to get cocaine – to the point of death by starvation/dehydration

• Given unlimited access to cocaine, animals will quickly die from cocaine related deaths.

Page 32: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

Stopping Cocaine Use

• Anhedonia - Dopamine depletion• Craving - intense craving for drug

Page 33: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

Methamphetamine

DOPAMINE DOPAMINE

Page 34: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

Meth - Signs of Abuse

–rapid weight loss

–nervous energy–no “need” for

sleep–aggressive

–mean temperment

–compulsive–excited talk–“Meth mouth”

Page 35: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson
Page 36: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

Meth - Signs of Withdrawal

–long crash–apathy–depression–fatigue

–anxiety–suicidal

ideation–cravings

Page 37: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

Alcohol

• Most popular drug of abuse• Probably the most physically toxic of

drugs • Damages almost every organ in the body• Easy access, adults use, advertising,

relatively inexpensive.• THE DRUG for Youth

Page 38: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

Action

• Dopamine – excitement & reward• Serotonin – feel – “normal”• GABA – lowers anxiety• Endorphins – pain relief, reward,

craving

Page 39: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

Endorphins

Drink

Endorphins

RewardStop Drinking

Endorphins

Craving

Block Endorphins with Naltrexone – Break Reward Cycle

Page 40: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

Endorphins

Drink

Endorphins

RewardStop Drinking

Endorphins

Craving

Block Endorphins with Naltrexone – Break Reward Cycle

Page 41: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

Opiates

Natural OpiatesDerived from raw opium

• Morphine• Codeine

Semi-syntheticsModified Natural

• Heroin• Vicodin

Synthetics• Fentanyl• Demerol• Methadone

Page 42: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

Opiates

• Heroin more potent -60-80% - <10% in ‘70’s• Younger age group – 18-24 y.o. and

younger• Suburban/Rural• Users start with snorting - IV within 12

months• Withdrawal painful - not deadly• Lots of Relapse

Page 43: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

“Take the best orgasmyou’ve ever had…Multiply it by a thousand.And you’re still nowherenear it.

Page 44: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

Heroin

Effects• Analgesia - change in

pain perception• Euphoria - Intense• Sedation - “on the nod”• Respiratory Depression• Cough Suppression• Nausea/vomiting• Constipation

Withdrawal• Pain• Depression• Alert• Rapid Breathing• Coughing• Nausea/Vomiting• Diarrhea• 3-5 days

Page 45: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

Addiction/Dependency

• Opioids trigger reward system – euphoria – leads to continued use – addiction

• Withdrawal symptoms are significant – regular use to avoid withdrawal - dependence

Page 46: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

Addiction vs. Dependency

Page 47: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

Heroin usage patterns

• Highly addictive and dependence producing• Significant tolerance up to 35X • Increased cost• Tolerance management (Tx, jail, etc.)• Mixing with other opiates and other drugs

(speedballing/cocaine)

Page 48: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

Treatment

• Traditional Recovery Based/NA• Naltrexone - Antagonist/Blocker• Opiate Maintenance Tx – withdrawal

management– Methadone- daily– Buprenorphine/Suboxone– Methadone to abstinence models

Page 49: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

Prescription Opiates

• OxyContin-an oral, controlled release form of the drug- Much abuse – crush the tablet – heroin-like high

• Darvon • Vicodin• Dilaudid

Page 50: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

Two “Types” of Rx Drug Abusers

• The Drug Abuser who likes Rx drugs.– Frequently use other

drugs (cocaine, alcohol, heroin, other non-Rx drugs)

– Fits the “model” of a drug abuser.

– “addicted” to high

• The Patient who becomes dependent on their medication– Infrequent use of other

substances – unless can’t get Rx.

– Don’t fit “model” of drug user – age, other behaviors.

– “dependent” on the drug

Page 51: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

Why Prescription Drug Users May Believe That They Are “Different”

• “I had/have real pain, I wasn’t using these to get high like those drug addicts”

• “My doctor prescribed these for me. It wasn’t my idea”

• “I never robbed anyone or did those things that addicts do.”

• “I have to take something for this pain!”

Page 52: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

What the Rx Drug User Might Have Trouble Relating To

• “Hitting Bottom”• Changing People, Places & Things• Change your “Lifestyle”• You must be completely abstinent from

everything else – alcohol included• Going to meetings all of the time.

Page 53: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

Marijuana

• Used since 2,700 BC• More potent today (5-10X) than ‘70’s• Kids starting younger• Eliminates boredom, focus

concentration, lowered anxiety, euphoric, increased appetite.

Page 54: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

Spice/K2 and Synthetic Cannabinoids

Page 55: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

Preparation of the “incense”:

• botanicals are sprayed with liquid preparations of:– HU-210– HU-211– CP 47,497– JWH-018– JWH-073

Page 56: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

Origins of Synthetic Cannabinoids

• HU-210 & HU-211 - synthesized at Hebrew University, Israel in 1988. HU-210 is an anti-inflammatory; HU-211 as an anesthetic

• CP 47,497 - developed by Pfizer in 1980 as an analgesic• JWH-018 & JWH-073 - synthesize by a researcher at

Clemson (1995) for use in THC receptor research - John W. Huffman

• more than 100 different synthetic cannabinoids have been created

Page 57: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson
Page 58: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson
Page 59: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson
Page 60: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

Some Effects of Synthetic Cannabinoids are Similar to THC

• increase heart rate & blood pressure• altered state of consciousness • mild euphoria and relaxation • perceptual alterations (time distortion)• intensification of sensory experiences• pronounced cognitive effects• impaired short-term memory • reduction in motor skill acuity• increase in reaction times

Page 61: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

Some Effects of Synthetic Cannabinoids are Different to THC

• production inconsistencies• herbal incense blends are harsher to inhale • increased restlessness & aggressive behavior • herbal incense produces a shorter “high”

(perceptual alterations & sensory effects are limited)

• doesn’t mix well with alcohol (hangovers)• incense costs more than marijuana

Page 62: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

Bath Salts:

• Ivory Wave• Ivory Pure• Ivory Coast• Purple Wave• Vanilla Sky

Page 63: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

What’s in Bath Salts?:

• Methylenedioxypyrovalerone (MDPV) is a psychoactive drug with stimulant properties which acts as both a norepinephrine-dopamine reuptake inhibitor (NDRI).

• MDPV has four times the potency of Ritalin• MDPV - no history of FDA approved medical

use• sold since 2007 as a research chemical

Page 64: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

Pharmacological Effects of “Bath Salts”:

• increase heart rate & blood pressure• pupil dilation • hyperactivity, arousal & over stimulation• increased energy & motivation• euphoria - agitation • dizziness• nausea• breathing difficulties• diminished perception of the requirement for

food and sleep

Page 65: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson
Page 66: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

Addiction is like…

• The dog does not want to let go of the bone (addiction/ denial).

• It gets excited when it thinks its going to get its bone (craving)

• It always wants more bones (loss of control)

• Sometimes the dog takes you for a walk.

A dog with a bone

Page 67: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

What Boomer is Thinking

What can I getaway with?They won’t test me

for another week.

Try the second-hand smoke

excuse.We can talk our way out of this.

Page 68: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

Treatment is like…

• You teach the dog’s owner to control the dog.

• You develop a variety of tools (relapse prevention) to help the dog be obedient.

• Some dogs are harder to train.

Obedience School for the Dog

Page 69: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

Early Recovery Issues

• Loss of lifestyle• Loss of Coping Strategy• Withdrawal• Cognitive deficits related to early

abstinence

Page 70: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

Cognitive Deficits

• Memory problems - short term loss

• Difficulty with abstractions• Difficulty with impulse

control• Similar performance to

those with brain damage - Improves.

Page 71: Understanding Drug Abuse and Addiction Steve Hanson

The End

Thanks