Addiction 101. Steve Hanson - Associate Commissioner NYS OASAS
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1 Addiction 101 Steve Hanson - Associate Commissioner NYS OASAS
2 After lunch Psychopharmacology Lecture
3 Basic Questions Why do people do drugs? Why can t/ won t some people stop?
4 Realities 1. People like Drugs. 2. We all like things faster and easier.
5 Drive to Get High Some people will seek any means to alter their state of consciousness
6 Zumanjaro: 41 Story Drop of Doom
7 Neurotransmitter Action Release of NT Reuptake Receptor
8 How Drugs Work Interact with neurochemistry Results: Feel Good Euphoria/reward Feel Better reduce negative feelings
9 Addiction is a Brain Disease Prolonged Use Changes the brain in Fundamental and Long Lasting Ways
10
11 Brain Changes
12 Natural Rewards
13
14 methamphetamine marijuana ecstasy opium etc.
15 % of Basal DA Output Food FOOD NAc shell Empty Box Feeding Time (min) Source: Di Chiara et al.
16 DA Concentration (% Baseline) Sex 200 SEX Sample Number ScrScr BasFemale 1 Present Scr Mounts Intromissions Ejaculations Scr Female 2 Present Source: Fiorino and Phillips Copulation Frequency
17 % of Basal Release Nicotine NICOTINE Accumbens Caudate hr Time After Nicotine
18 % of Basal Release Alcohol 250 Accumbens Alcohol 200 Dose (g/kg ip) hr Time After Ethanol
19 % of Basal Release Cocaine 400 Accumbens COCAINE 300 DA DOPAC HVA hr Time After Cocaine
20 % of Basal Release Morphine Accumbens Heroin MORPHINE Dose (mg/kg) hr Time After Morphine Source: Di Chiara and Imperato
21 % of Basal Release Methamphetamine 1100 Accumbens METHAMPHETAMINE DA DOPAC HVA hr Time After Amphetamine Source: Di Chiara and Imperato
22 Homer Says If it felt good, do it again and again
23 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
24
25 Circuits Involved In Drug Abuse and Addiction STOP GO
26 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.
27 Fred Flintstone Brakes 28
28 AMYGDALAR CONNECTIVITY during brief.5 sec Cocaine Cues Placebo Drug 2 amyg conx (n=7) Baclofen blunts AMYGDALAR CONNECTIVITY Baclofen
29 Substance Use Disorder Chronic Disease Prone to Relapse Requires significant behavior changes Similar to Heart Disease, Diabetes, Asthma, Gingivitis,etc. Similar treatment success
30 Cocaine Natural Stimulant from South America Main Effects: Euphoria Fight/Flight Snorted, Smoked, Injected, Other Mucosal Absorption
31 5 mins Smoked - onset 5-12 seconds mins Snorted - onset 2 mins. 15 mins 1 hour
32 EFFECTS Dose Response Metabolic Crisis Psychosis Paranoia Energized Euphoria Anxiety DOSE
33 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.
34 Methamphetamine Synthetic stimulant Amphetamine family Main Effects 8-12 hours from single dose: Euphoria Energy Snorted, smoked, injected
35 Methamphetamine DOPAMINE DOPAMINE
36 Meth - Signs of Abuse Rapid weight loss Nervous energy No need for sleep Aggressive Excited talk Meth mouth
37
38 Meth - Signs of Withdrawal long crash apathy depression fatigue anxiety suicidal ideation cravings
39 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
40 Action Dopamine excitement & reward Serotonin feel normal GABA lowers anxiety Endorphins pain relief, reward, craving
41 Opioids
42 Heroin/Opioids Americans
43
44 Opioids Natural Opiates Derived from raw opium Morphine Codeine Semi-synthetics Modified Natural Heroin Vicodin Synthetics Fentanyl Demerol Methadone
45
46 Heroin Heroin more potent % - <10% in 70 s Younger age group y.o. and younger Suburban/Rural Users start with snorting - IV within 12 months Withdrawal painful - not deadly Lots of Relapse
47 Take the best orgasm you ve ever had Multiply it by a thousand. And you re still nowhere near it.
48 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
49 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)
50 Prescription Opiates OxyContin Vicodin Hysingla ER
51 Overdose Reversal Kits Kits can save lives Over 90,000 trained in NY 2,900 known reversals Available Over the Counter at pharmacies
52 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
53 Then vs. Now
54 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.
55 Cannabis Edibles
56 Vaping
57 Spice/K2 and Synthetic Cannabinoids
58 Botanicals are sprayed with liquid preparations of: HU-210 HU-211 CP 47,497 JWH-018 JWH-073 Preparation of the Incense :
59 Origins of Synthetic Cannabinoids HU-210 & HU synthesized at Hebrew University, Israel in 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 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
60
61 Similar to THC, but Psychotic episodes Herbal incense blends are harsher to inhale Increased restlessness & aggressive behavior Doesn t mix well with alcohol (hangovers)
62
63 Addiction is like A dog with a bone 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) Dogs live in the moment no planning
64 What Boomer is Thinking They won t test me for another week. What can I get away with? Try the secondhand smoke excuse. We can talk our way out of this.
65 Treatment is like Obedience School for the Dog 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.
66 Early Recovery Issues Loss of lifestyle Loss of Coping Strategy Withdrawal Cognitive deficits related to early abstinence
67 Cognitive Deficits Memory problems - short term loss Difficulty with abstractions Difficulty with impulse control Similar performance to those with brain damage - Improves.
68 The End Thanks In Memory of Boomer
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