polydrug use
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Author(s):  
JaHyun Ho ◽  
Bokyoung Kim ◽  
Kue Sook Kim ◽  
Chang-Ho Jihn ◽  
Min-Young Kim ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Merran McAlister ◽  
Tom Sullivan

This study uses data from the Drug Use Monitoring in Australia program to investigate the prevalence of GHB and phenmetrazine use among police detainees. Fifteen percent (n=75) of police detainees surveyed reported using GHB in the past 12 months. GHB use was also most prevalent among respondents in their 30s. Methamphetamine use (90%, n=27) and polydrug use (77%, n=23) were also common among those who had recently used GHB. One percent of detainees (n=4) had used phenmetrazine in their lifetime and none tested positive to the drug.


2021 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Mads F. Kjærgaard ◽  
Poul Videbech ◽  
Jens J. Nørbæk ◽  
Bjørn H. Ebdrup

Abstract Background Patients with gamma-hydroxybutyric acid withdrawal symptoms are at high risk of developing organic delirium, which can be fatal. The recommended first-line treatment is benzodiazepines, but treatment-resistant cases are frequent. Here we describe a case of successful bilateral electroconvulsive therapy in a patient with severe and highly agitated acute organic delirium induced by gamma-hydroxybutyric acid withdrawal and complicated by polydrug use resistant to first-line treatment. To our knowledge, this is the first report on the effect of electroconvulsive therapy on treatment-resistant delirium caused by gamma-hydroxybutyric acid withdrawal. Case presentation A 21-year-old Danish man diagnosed with untreated attention deficit hyperactivity disorder developed severely agitated acute organic delirium caused by gamma-hydroxybutyric acid withdrawal in a Danish psychiatric ward. The patient was subjected to physical restraints and transferred to the intensive care unit for treatment. During the next 10 days, the patient showed no clinical improvement despite first-line, high-dose benzodiazepines along with intense supportive treatment with propofol, phenobarbital, and antipsychotics. On day 11, bilateral frontotemporal electroconvulsive therapy treatment was initiated and full clinical recovery was obtained after four sessions. Discussion The full clinical remission after four electroconvulsive therapy sessions, strongly supports that electroconvulsive therapy may be an effective treatment when severe delirium induced by gamma-hydroxybutyric acid withdrawal is resistant to conventional first-line treatment with benzodiazepines. Moreover, this case illustrates that clinically effective seizures were achieved despite intensive concurrent exposure to anticonvulsive drugs. Therefore, this case report encourages consideration of electroconvulsive therapy in patients with gamma-hydroxybutyric acid delirium who are resistant to psychopharmacological treatment.


Author(s):  
Juan-Miguel Guerras ◽  
Juan Hoyos ◽  
Patricia García de Olalla ◽  
Luis Fuente ◽  
Lidia Herrero ◽  
...  

This study compares the prevalence of drug use and the typologies of polydrug use (PDU) in men who have sex with men (MSM) and general population men (GPM). Participants were men aged 16–64, living in the provinces of Madrid and Barcelona: 1720 were recruited in a GPM survey, and 2658 were HIV-negative MSM from HIV/STIs diagnosis services. Lifetime and last-year prevalence of drug use and prevalence ratios (PRs) of MSM to GPM for the different drugs were calculated using Poisson regression. Latent class analysis (LCA) was performed to identify typologies of PDU. Lifetime use of the drugs considered was higher in MSM, and even higher for drug use in the last-year: PRs for cannabis, hallucinogens and cocaine ranged from 2–5; for amphetamine, ecstasy and methamphetamine 12–16; and above 60 for ketamine, GHB/GBL, inhalants and mephedrone. In the LCA for lifetime PDU four classes arose from the GPM (No-PDU (79.6%); Conventional PDU (13.8%); Intensive conventional PDU (4.9%); Heavy PDU (1.8%)) and four among MSM (No-PDU (57.7%); Conventional PDU plus poppers (18.8%); PDU preferring chemsex drugs (6.4%); Heavy PDU (17.2%)). For PDU during the last-year, three classes arose in the GPM: No-PDU (94.7%); Conventional PDU (4.3%); Heavy PDU (0.9%). For MSM, we identified four classes: No-PDU (64.7%); Conventional PDU plus poppers (15.6%); PDU preferring chemsex drugs (6.2%); Heavy PDU (13.5%). MSM should be considered a priority group for the prevention of the use of all drugs but the heterogeneity of PDU typologies regarding users’ preference towards conventional and/or sexualised drugs needs to be taken into account.


Author(s):  
Carla F. Olivari ◽  
Jorge Gaete ◽  
Nicolás Rodriguez ◽  
Esteban Pizarro ◽  
Paloma Del Villar ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Bronwyn Myers ◽  
Felicia A. Browne ◽  
Tara Carney ◽  
Tracy Kline ◽  
Courtney Peasant Bonner ◽  
...  

Although physical and sexual abuse exposure is a well-established risk for poor health, the dimensions of abuse associated with health among socially vulnerable adolescent girls and young women (AGYW) remain underexamined. This article describes associations between combinations of abuse type and timing with mental health, substance use, and sexual risk outcomes among a sample of 499 AGYW (aged 16 to 19) who had left school early and were recruited for a cluster randomized trial in Cape Town, South Africa. Approximately one-third (33.5%; 95% CI: 28.7, 38.6) of participants reported lifetime abuse. Exposure to more than one type of abuse was associated with increased risk of depression (β = 3.92; 95% CI: 2.25, 5.59) and anxiety (β = 3.70; 95% CI: 2.11, 5.28), and greater odds of polydrug use (OR = 2.10; 95% CI: 1.02, 4.34) and substance-impaired sex (OR = 2.17; 95% CI: 1.31, 3.86). Exposure to multiple types of abuse during childhood/early adolescence and again in late adolescence was associated with increased risk of depression (β = 4.65; 95% CI: 3.15, 6.14), anxiety (β = 4.35; 95% CI: 2.70, 6.02), and polydrug use (OR = 2.37; 95% CI: 1.03, 5.73). Findings underscore the need for trauma-informed interventions that reduce mental health, substance use, and sexual risks among AGYW who have experienced multiple forms of abuse and recurrent abuse.


2021 ◽  
Vol 15 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alicja Anna Binkowska ◽  
Natalia Jakubowska ◽  
Klaudia Krystecka ◽  
Natalia Galant ◽  
Agnieszka Piotrowska-Cyplik ◽  
...  

Background: Impairments in various subdomains of memory have been associated with chronic cannabis use, but less is known about their neural underpinnings, especially in the domain of the brain’s oscillatory activity.Aims: To investigate neural oscillatory activity supporting working memory (WM) in regular cannabis users and non-using controls. We focused our analyses on frontal midline theta and posterior alpha asymmetry as oscillatory fingerprints for the WM’s maintenance process.Methods: 30 non-using controls (CG) and 57 regular cannabis users—27 exclusive cannabis users (CU) and 30 polydrug cannabis users (PU) completed a Sternberg modified WM task with a concurrent electroencephalography recording. Theta, alpha and beta frequency bands were examined during WM maintenance.Results: When compared to non-using controls, the PU group displayed increased frontal midline theta (FMT) power during WM maintenance, which was positively correlated with RT. The posterior alpha asymmetry during the maintenance phase, on the other hand, was negatively correlated with RT in the CU group. WM performance did not differ between groups.Conclusions: Both groups of cannabis users (CU and PU), when compared to the control group, displayed differences in oscillatory activity during WM maintenance, unique for each group (in CU posterior alpha and in PU FMT correlated with performance). We interpret those differences as a reflection of compensatory strategies, as there were no differences between groups in task performance. Understanding the psychophysiological processes in regular cannabis users may provide insight on how chronic use may affect neural networks underlying cognitive processes, however, a polydrug use context (i.e., combining cannabis with other illegal substances) seems to be an important factor.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eva Codinach-Danés ◽  
Nuria Obradors-Rial ◽  
Helena González-Casals ◽  
Maria Rosa Cirera-Guàrdia ◽  
Queralt Miro Catalina ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: The aim was to estimate the prevalence of tobacco and cannabis use and the relationship between these two substances in a cohort of young people from Central Catalonia in the period 2012-2020 according to sex and year of follow-up.Methods: Prospective longitudinal study with 828 students in 4th year of Compulsory Secondary Education (ESO) in Central Catalonia, who answered a survey on health behaviour in 2012 (828 young people), 2016 (342 young people) and in 2020 (271 young people). The dependent variables were traditional tobacco use, cannabis use in the last month and polydrug use of both substances. The independent variables were sex and year of follow-up. For the prevalence analysis, frequencies and percentages were analysed with their respective 95% confidence intervals. Chi-Square and Cochran's Q contrast were used to test the relationship between independent and paired qualitative variables. A significance level of 0.05 was set. Results: There are significant differences between the prevalence of smoking cannabis in the last month in boys and girls aged 19-20 years and 23-24 years. Girls who did not use traditional tobacco in 2012, 0.9% (0.1-6.5), 1.9% (0.4-7.5) and 7.5% (3.8-14.5) did use cannabis in 2012, 2016 and 2020 respectively, with a significant increase over the period analysed (p-value = 0.014). Boys who did not smoke traditional tobacco in 2012, 3.5% (1.1-10.6), 14.4% (8.3-23.9) and 14.3% (8.2-23.6) did smoke cannabis in 2012, 2016 and 2020 respectively, with a significant change between 2012 and 2020 (p-value = 0.006). Conclusions: There is a strong association between tobacco use and cannabis use, with those young people who smoke tobacco regularly having the highest prevalence of cannabis use. There is a significant percentage of young people where the gateway to smoked drugs is no longer tobacco but cannabis itself.


Author(s):  
Rodrigo Garcia-Cerde ◽  
Camila W. Lopes de Oliveira ◽  
Valdemir Ferreira-Junior ◽  
Sheila Cavalcante Caetano ◽  
Zila M. Sanchez

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