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Essentials of Understanding Abnormal Behavior Chapter Eight. Substance-Related Disorders. Substance-Related Disorders.
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Essentials of Understanding Abnormal BehaviorChapter Eight Substance-Related Disorders
Substance-Related Disorders • Result from the use of psychoactive substances that affect the central nervous system, cause significant social, occupational, psychological, or physical problems, and sometimes result in abuse or dependence. • User may become a danger to others. • Drug use may result in criminal activities. • Use of one substance may lead to use of other substances.
Figure 9.1: Percentage of Persons Who Reported Using Specific Substances at Any Time During Their Lives (Age 12 and Over)
Figure 9.2: Disorders Chart: Substance-Related Disorders (cont’d)
Figure 9.2: Disorders Chart: Substance-Related Disorders (cont’d)
Substance-Related Disorders (cont’d) • DSM-IV-TR categories of substance-related disorders: • Substance-use disorders: Those involving dependence and abuse • Substance-induced disorders: Those involving withdrawal and substance-induced delirium • Substance-use disorders differentiated by: • Actual substance used • Whether disorder pattern is substance abuse or substance dependence
Substance-Related Disorders (cont’d) • Substance abuse: Maladaptive pattern of recurrent use that • Extends over a period of 12 months • Leads to notable impairment or distress • Continues despite social, occupational, psychological, physical or safety problems
Substance-Related Disorders (cont’d) • Substance dependence: Maladaptive pattern of use over 12-month period, characterized by: • Unsuccessful efforts to control use, despite knowledge of harmful effects • Takes more of substance than intended • Devotes considerable time to activities necessary to obtain the substance
Substance-Related Disorders (cont’d) • Tolerance: Increasing doses are necessary to achieve desired effect • Withdrawal: Distress/impairment in social, occupational, other areas of functioning or physical or emotional symptoms (e.g., shaking, irritability, inability to concentrate) after reducing or ceasing intake • Tolerance or withdrawal indicates physiological dependence.
Substance-Related Disorders (cont’d) • Intoxication: A substance affecting CNS is ingested and causes maladaptive behaviors or psychological changes • Progression to abuse/dependence: • Experimentation • Early regular use (actively seeking substance) • Plan daily activities around drug use • Drugs needed to avoid constant dysphoria; obvious physical and mental deterioration
Substance-Use Disorders • Substance abuse, dependence, intoxication, and withdrawal can result from such substances as: • Prescription drugs (e.g., Valium) • Legal substances (e.g., alcohol) • Illegal substances (e.g., cocaine)
Substance-Use Disorders (cont’d) • Alcohol and substance abuse: Second leading cause of disability in the U.S., Canada, and Western Europe • Prevalence: 8.2% of population over the age of 11 use illicit drugs (most prevalent among youths and young adults).
Substance-Use Disorders (cont’d) • Nine categories of illicit drug use: • Marijuana (including hashish) • Cocaine (including crack) • Heroin • Hallucinogens (including LSD, PCP, etc.) • Inhalants • Nonmedical use of prescription drugs: • Pain relievers • Tranquilizers • Stimulants • Sedatives
Table 9.1: Characteristics of Various Psychoactive Substances
Figure 9.3: Past-Month Illicit Drug Use Among Persons Aged 12 and Older, by Race/Ethnicity
Depressants or Sedatives • Cause generalized depression of the central nervous system and a slowing down of responses • Include, among other substances: • Alcohol • Narcotics • Barbiturates • Benzodiazepines
Alcohol-Use Disorders • Alcoholic: Person who abuses/ is dependent on alcohol • Alcoholism: Characterized by abuse of, or dependency on, alcohol, which is a depressant • Binge drinking: Person abstains for a while, but is unable to control/moderate intake when drinking resumes
Alcohol-Use Disorders (cont’d) • Pattern of problem drinking: • Finds taste unpleasant; swears never to drink again after first bout of drunkenness • Heavy drinking serves a purpose (e.g., reduces anxiety) • Consumption continues despite negative consequences • Preoccupation with alcohol consumption; deterioration of social and occupational functioning
Alcohol Use • Alcohol consumption around the world: • 11% of U.S. adults consume 1 oz or more of alcohol per day; 55% drink more than 3 drinks per week; 35% abstain • In the U.S, 50% of total alcohol consumed is drunk by only 10% of drinkers, especially ages 18-25 • Varies according to cultural traditions and gender (in U.S. men drink 2-5 times as much as women) • In the U.S., problems in social, medical, physical, and financial costs
Figure 9.4: Gender, Ethnic, and Age Differences in Self-Reports of Alcohol Use During a One-Month Period
The Effects of Alcohol • Short-term and long-term physiological and psychological effects: • Depresses CNS functioning • Depends on such factors as a person’s weight, amount of food in stomach, stress, etc. • Affects mood and behavior
The Effects of Alcohol (cont’d) • Long-term: Blackouts, tolerance, destruction of brain cells, cirrhosis of liver and other lethal diseases • Fetal Alcohol Syndrome (FAS): Alcohol consumption during pregnancy can result in mentally retarded, physically deformed children. No amount of alcohol has been proven safe for consumption during pregnancy.
Table 9.2: Blood Alcohol Level as a Function of Number of Drinks Consumed and Body Weight
Other Depressants or Sedatives • Narcotics (opiates): • Drugs such as opium and its derivatives (morphine, heroin, codeine) that depress the CNS • Provide relief from pain, anxiety, tension • Tolerance builds rapidly; extreme withdrawal symptoms • Prevalence: 0.7% of adult population at some time in their lives; prevalence decreases with age; greater for males than females
Other Depressants or Sedatives (cont’d) • Barbiturates (“downers”): Powerful depressant of CNS that are commonly used to induce relaxation and sleep • More lethal than heroin (accidental overdose or combined with alcohol) • Polysubstance dependence: Dependence on repeated use of at least 3 substances (excluding caffeine and nicotine) for a period of 12 months • Benzodiazepines (e.g., Valium)
“Club Drugs” • Used by 70% of attendees at dance clubs and raves attended by young people • Stimulants: Ecstasy/MDMA, LSD, GHB, ketamine, methamphetamine (responsible for largest number of emergency room visits) • Benzodiazepines: Rohypnol (“Roofies” or the “date-rape” drug) • Ecstasy can cause cardiovascular failure, higher heart rate and blood pressure, heart wall stress, and cognitive deficits.
Stimulants • Stimulant: Central nervous system energizer, inducing elation, grandiosity, hyperactivity, agitation, and appetite suppression • Amphetamines: Drugs that speed up CNS activity and produce increased alertness, energy, and sometimes feelings of euphoria and confidence (“uppers”) • Prevalence: 2% of U.S. adults at some time in their lives suffer amphetamine use/abuse; more male than female (3-4:1), more for low SES • Caffeine is also a stimulant.
Stimulants (cont’d) • Nicotine: Most commonly associated with cigarette smoking, which accounts for 1/6 of deaths in the U.S. and is the single most preventable cause of death. 1 in 3 smokers will die from a smoking-related disease. • Prevalence: ~30% Americans over the age of 11 currently use tobacco products • Symptoms of nicotine dependence: • Unsuccessful attempts to stop or reduce use • Attempts to stop lead to withdrawal symptoms • Continued use despite serious physical disorder (e.g., emphysema)
Stimulants (cont’d) • Cocaine: Substance extracted from coca plant that induces feelings of euphoria and self-confidence in users (followed by depression) • Chronic abuse: Neurophysiological changes in CNS and premature ventricular heartbeats and death • Crack: Purified, potent form of cocaine produced by heating cocaine with ether
Hallucinogens • Hallucinogen: Produces hallucinations, vivid sensory awareness, heightened alertness, or perceptions of increased insight • Marijuana: The mildest and most commonly used hallucinogen • In the US, marijuana is not generally used in a form that is potent enough to cause hallucinations. Hash hish oil, which is 50X more potent than the marijuana usually smoked in the US, does cause hallucinations. • Prevalence: 40% over the age of 12 have used at some point (most commonly: ages 18-30), more common for males • Lysergic Acid Diethylamide (LSD) • Phencyclidine (PCP)
Etiology of Substance-Use Disorders • Biological: Heredity and congenital factors • Two types of alcoholism • Familial: Family history of alcoholism, suggesting genetic predisposition • Non-familial: Suggesting environmental factors • Genes have been identified for certain traits in alcoholism. • Risk factors: Neurotransmitters, sensitivity or responsiveness to alcohol, CNS functioning
Etiology of Substance-Use Disorders (cont’d) • Psychodynamic: Childhood trauma, especially in oral stage, leads to repression of painful conflicts involving dependency needs • Alcohol allows repressed conflicts to be expressed and offers oral gratification to satisfy dependency needs.
Etiology of Substance-Use Disorders (cont’d) • Personality characteristics: • Associated with high activity level, emotionality, goal impersistence, sociability • Life transitions/maturational events • No evidence for “alcoholic personality,” although antisocial behavior and depression are sometimes associated with drinking problems
Etiology of Substance-Use Disorders (cont’d) • Sociocultural factors: • More males and young adults than females and older adults • More Catholics than Protestants and Jews • Rates of alcoholism is NOT related to per capita consumption, although France has high rates of both • Parents, peers, and cultural values • Two-way street regarding peers: Users seek out other users, and users influence their friends to use
Etiology of Substance-Use Disorders (cont’d) • Behavioral: • Anxiety reduction: Approach-avoidance conflict • Learned expectations • Cognitive influences: Tension-reducing model • Alcohol reduces tension and anxiety; relief of tension reinforces drinking behavior • Coping responses plus expectancy
Etiology of Substance-Use Disorders (cont’d) • Relapse: Resume drinking after voluntary abstinence • Negative emotional states, negative physical states, gender differences (women: interpersonal conflict), social pressure, coping responses • Abstinence violation effect: Loss of personal control after drinking begins • Biological: Physical dependence; avoid withdrawal symptoms
Theories of the Addiction Process • Solomon’s opponent process theory: Conditions that cause drug experimentation have not been identified. • Best predictor: Availability • Addiction: An acquired motivation (opponent process theory of acquired motivation) • Motivation changes with repeated consumption
Theories of the Addiction Process (cont’d) • Wise’s two-factor model: Positive and negative reinforcement • Tiffany’s theory of automatic processes: Drug-use behaviors are largely controlled by “automatic” processes, and once activated, drug-use behaviors are highly resistant to change.
Intervention and Treatment of Substance-Use Disorders • Two phases: • Removal of abusive substance • Long-term maintenance without the substance • Detoxification: Alcohol or drug treatment phase characterized by removal of the abusive substance, after which the user is immediately or eventually prevented from consuming the substance
Intervention and Treatment of Substance-Use Disorders (cont’d) • Self-help groups: Alcoholics Anonymous helps many alcoholics; Al-Anon and Alateen offer support to adults and teens living with alcoholics • Pharmacological: Use of chemical substances (e.g., Antabuse) to produce aversion to drug • Often combined with psychotherapy to develop coping skills and alternative life patterns
Cognitive and Behavioral Interventions and Treatment • Aversion therapy: Response to a stimulus is decreased by pairing the stimulus with an aversive stimulus • Covert sensitization: Imagine a noxious stimulus occurring in the presence of a behavior • Skills training: Learn to resist peer pressure or temptation; resolve emotional conflicts or problems; more effective communication • Reinforcing abstinence: Behavioral reinforcements for abstinence; effective for opioid dependence
Cognitive-Behavioral Interventions and Treatment (cont’d) • Behavioral treatment for cigarette smoking: • Aversive procedures have been disappointing, but “rapid smoking” has had positive outcomes. • Nicotine fading (gradual withdrawal) more effective • Scheduled-interval method more effective than “cold turkey” • Relapse prevention: Multicomponent programs effective for quitting smoking
Cognitive-Behavioral Interventions and Treatment (cont’d) • Relaxation and systematic desensitization • Motivational: Important and realistic goal setting • Stress management and cognitive restructuring; coping with negative emotions and stress • Response prevention • Controlled drinking: Controversial
Other Interventions and Treatments of Substance-Use Disorders • Multimodal treatment • Prevention programs • Discourage use before it begins • Education • Media exposure
Effectiveness of Treatment • Effective, but some studies suggest outcomes have been modest • Some individuals recover on their own without treatment • No single “best” treatment: Find the best combination of treatments for particular individuals with substance use disorders