* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Club drugs, legal highs or new psychoactive substances
Survey
Document related concepts
Transcript
Drugs, legal and illegal Dr Tim M Williams Clinical Director – Specialised Services AWP Mental Health NHS Trust 4th July 2014 – Wills Hall, Bristol. Drug and alcohol harms Alcohol Alcohol affordability index, 1980-2010. Appleby J BMJ 2012;344:bmj.e2634 ©2012 by British Medical Journal Publishing Group Real spending on alcohol in UK, 1964-2010. Appleby J BMJ 2012;344:bmj.e2634 ©2012 by British Medical Journal Publishing Group Hospital admissions wholly attributable to alcohol in England, 2002 to 2010 Appleby J BMJ 2012;344:bmj.e2634 ©2012 by British Medical Journal Publishing Group The Scots leads the world Leon and McCambridge, Lancet 2006 (updated) Leon and McCambridge, Lancet 2006 (updated) Alcohol withdrawal Time since last drink tremor nausea and vomiting anxiety, irritability, depression BP, pulse, temp insomnia transient hallucinations/illusions 48 hours seizures (7 - 48 hours) 72 hours Delirium tremens (peak onset 48 - 72 hours after last drink or reduction). Tremor, hallucinations, confusion, plus delusions, insomnia and agitation, autonomic hyperactivity What to do when abstinent? • Relapse Prevention essential • Not usually offered by statutory/specialist services • 12 weeks treatment only in my service • Medication??? ▫ Disulfiram, acamprasate, naltrexone ▫ nalmefene currently hit the headlines Alcohol harms (is a downer) Immediate Risks Longer term • Accidents ▫ Head injuries ▫ Driving ▫ Death (esp drowning / RTA) • • • • • • • • • Vulnerability ▫ to exploitation / date rape • Heart ▫ Seen more in Russia Liver Pancreas Brain / neurons Heart Vessels / kidney’s GI tract Sexual dysfunction Addictive potential ▫ Minority: 3-5% dependence • Mental health ▫ Massive co-morbidity “Drugs” UK drug use Opioids Benzodiazepines and opioids • Benzodiazepines plus methadone or buprenorphine - higher opioid toxicity symptoms (Nielsen et al, 2007 Addiction) - greater peak effects on performance measures (Lintzeris et al, 2006 J. Clin. Psychopharmacology) - higher mortality among patients co-prescribed methadone and benzodiazepines (McCowan et al, 2009 BMJ) Gabapentin misuse Smith et al Br J Gen Pract. 2012 Aug;62(601):406-7. • “In primary care, an increasing number and urgency of prescription requests cannot necessarily be explained by the increased number of cases of neuropathic pain” 5.2% of people in SM services using gabapentin Mean daily dose 1343mg Of 1400 post-mortems 48 had gabapentin 36 of whom also had morphine/ methadone ▫ Is fatal in overdose and unlike opioids or benzo’s is irreversible Opioid harms (are downers) Immediate Risks Longer term • Respiratory arrest ▫ Esp when mixed with alcohol and other downers • Crime and poverty ▫ Big overlap • Accidents • Vulnerability ▫ to exploitation • Addictive potential ▫ Yes • Mental health? • IV use ▫ BBV’s • Smoked ▫ COPD Cocaine Cocaine (crack) and other stimulants • Difficult to engage • Difficult to treat • High mental health co-morbidity Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2010 Feb 17;(2):CD0 07380 Psychostimulants did not improve cocaine use, craving, or treatment retention in comparision to placebo Cocaine harms (is an upper) Immediate risks Longer term • CVS risks • Addictive potential – very potent ▫ Could trigger a CVS event • Psychosis ▫ Could trigger an event • Specific Risks ▫ Nothing acute • Long-term risks ▫ prominent CVS risks MI, stroke ▫ COPD (crack) ▫ Nasal septum (snorted cocaine) NPS …….or novel psychoactive substances (NPS) …….or “club drugs” …….or “legal highs” Source- NTA ‘Club drugs: emerging risks and trends’ Dec 2012 3,4 Methylenedioxmethamphetamine (MDMA) •The recreational drug Ecstasy •Onset 20 minutes •Effects last 2-5 hours •Particular empathogenic / entactogenic qualities •Physiologically safe in therapeutic applications How dangerous is MDMA when used recreationally? • Between 1997 and 2000 in the UK: • 81 deaths were attributed in part to ecstasy(Schifano F. 2003) But.... • • • • • 59% also included opiates 60% included alcohol Only 7% involved MDMA alone; That is six deaths in three years After some 300 million ecstasy tablets were consumed by over a million people. • And remember: this is NOT clinical use. This is the uncontrolled recreational use of ‘ecstasy’. 4.8% of British soldiers returning from combat in Iraq met the criteria for PTSD (Iversen et al 2009) US soldiers returning from service in Iraq and/or Afghanistan, the incidence of PTSD is as high as 18%. (Hoge et al 2004) More returning soldiers from Iraq and Afghanistan have committed suicide from untreated PTSD than ever died in the conflict out there. 2009 - MAPS / Mithoefer MDMA for PTSD Study: Michael and Annie Mithoefer, Hypotheses: 1. MDMA subjects will show improved rates of PTSD. 2. MDMA will not be associated with neurotoxicity. Baseline measurements Introductory Sessions First MDMA / Placebo Session Four non-drug sessions Measurements Measurements Second MDMA / placebo session Four nondrug sessions Measurement THREEYEAR FOLLOWUP: Two Month Follow-up Results for Hypothesis One: % meeting PTSD diagnosis – pre/post 100 90 80 % with PTSD 70 Baseline 60 50 final 40 30 20 10 0 Placebo MDMA Mithoefer © 2009 3 4 MDMA harms (is an upper) Immediate risks Longer term • CVS risks • Addictive potential – very unlikely due to high tolerance ▫ Could trigger a CVS event • Psychosis ▫ Could trigger an event • Specific Risks ▫ Hyperthermia ▫ ?water intoxication • Very little data on long-term risks ▫ no CVS risks recorded ▫ No consistent evidence of long-term memory deficits. Short term reversible deficits recognised. MDMA/Ecstasy adulterants • An emerging problem ▫ Need to develop new harm minimisation messages. ▫ Specific advise for coroners essential • PMA (para-Methoxyamphetamine or 4-MA) ▫ 1 hour onset • PMMA (para-Methoxy-N-methylamphetamine) ▫ Linked to deaths, ?less toxic than PMA PMA / PMMA (is an upper) Immediate risks Longer term • CVS risks • Addictive potential ? ▫ ?Could trigger a CVS event • Psychosis ▫ ?Could trigger an event • Specific Risks ▫ Hyperthermia (greater than MDMA) • No data on long-term risks Mephedrone 4-MMC, MMCat, Miaow, Meow Meow, Bubble, • 4-Methylmethcathinone (4-MMC) • Stimulant, appeared in or around 2007 (Sweden) • Sold as powder, crystals or sometimes capsules • Made illegal from 16/04/10 (Class B). Price nearly doubled • Had bypassed regulations as ‘plant food’, ‘not for human consumption’ The Scunthorpe two: Louis Wainwright and Nicholas Smith Died from taking methadone not mephedrone with significant quantities of alcohol • Professor Sheila Bird, of the Medical Research Council's Biostatistics Unit in Cambridge “deaths from cocaine fell in the first six months of 2009 to 66, a statistically significant drop from 95 in the same period of 2008” Mephedrone harms (is an upper) Immediate risks Longer term • CVS risks • Addictive potential ▫ Could trigger a CVS event • Psychosis ▫ Could trigger an event • ?Specific risk of vasoconstriction • Specific come down risk and suicide • Very little data on long-term risks ▫ Likely CVS risks ▫ ?mental health K, ketamine • and methoxetamine? The Observer Sunday 17 April 2011 Every parent's worst nightmare: how ketamine killed our daughter Bright, popular, rebellious and creative, 21-year-old Louise Cattell had everything to live for. Then she made a fatal mistake. She took the party drug ketamine and was found dead in the bath by her flatmate. Ketamine harms (is a downer) Immediate Risks Longer term • Accidents ▫ especially drowning ▫ and hypothermia ▫ driving • Bladder problems ▫ Thickening ▫ Urgency ▫ ‘K-cramps’ ▫ Eventually dysfunctional bladder • Vulnerability ▫ to exploitation • However is generally a very safe drug used in a medical context • Stimulant at low doses • Addictive potential ▫ Users 1-12g a day • Mental health? GHB, GBL and 1,4-BD Confusingly sometimes referred to as “liquid ecstasy” GHB/GBL harms (is a downer) immediate Longer term • Respiratory depressant ▫ Very dangerous with alcohol ▫ Narrow therapeutic window • Addictive • Accidents ▫ Much like alcohol ▫ Disinhibits and poor perception of risks • Withdrawal syndrome ▫ Like alcohol but worse ▫ Severe seizures ▫ ?baclofen to treat Khat Main active ingredients are cathine and cathinone Khat harms (is an upper) Immediate risks Longer term • CVS risks ▫ Precipitate event • CVS risks ▫ Early MI ▫ Early stroke • Psychosis ▫ Minor risk ▫ But mixed with PTSD increased • Dependence ▫ Small minority • GI cancers?? ▫ Oral ▫ oesophageal M-Cat, madcat and now M2 ie 3,4,DMMC (are stimulants) See what the are doing here: • cathinone (in khat) • methcathinone (m-cat) •4-methylmethcathinone (mephedrone) •3,4-dimethylmethcathinone (“M2”) Harms?? Immediate Longer term • CVS • CVS • Mental health • Mental health • Specific risks? ▫ Anaphylaxis ▫ Respiratory?? • Dependence Can include 6-APB in this category (unhelpfully often called “benzofury”) 6-(2-aminopropyl)benzofuran 2-CB (MDMA like) The Sun 24/1/13 “Krokodil” • CNN -“flesh-eating zombie drug” • USA Today -“Flesh-Rotting ‘Krokodil’ Drug Emerges in USA,” • GQ – “flesh-eating heroin substitute that has found favour with Russia's homeless, and now "krokodil" has come to Britain.” “Krockadil” (desomorphine) Immediate Longer term • CVS ▫ Resp depression + death • CVS • Mental health • Mental health • Specific risks? ▫ “flesh eating”?? • Dependence ▫ absolutely Reports in Russia of homemade ‘krokodil’ by mixing codeine with chemicals such as gasoline, red phosphorus, and hydrochloric acid. Extremely unlikely to be found in Europe and US due to easy availability of opioids Other drugs (not uppers or downers) Cannabinoids hallucinogens • Respiratory if smoked • Mushrooms (psilocybin), Acid (LSD) ▫ Low risk • Psychosis ▫ Precipitated - yes ▫ Cause - probably no • Anxiety • Amotivational ▫ Definitely • Salvia divinorum ▫ Slightly different but still low risk • MDA ▫ A bit more of a stimulant (MDMA like) End