Title: Physical Dependence vs' Addiction
1Physical Dependencevs.Addiction
- Physical dependence results from the bodys
adaptation to a drug or medication and is defined
by the presence of - Tolerance and/or
- Withdrawal
- Addiction may occur with or without the presence
of physical dependence
2DSM-IV Substance Dependence
- A maladaptive pattern of substance use , leading
to clinically significant impairment or distress,
as manifested by three (or more) of the
following, occurring at any time in the same
12-month period - The substance is often taken in larger amounts or
over a longer period of time than was intended
3DSM-IV Substance Dependence
- A maladaptive pattern of substance use , leading
to clinically significant impairment or distress,
as manifested by three (or more) of the
following, occurring at any time in the same
12-month period - There is a persistent desire or unsuccessful
efforts to cut down or control substance use
4DSM-IV Substance Dependence
- A maladaptive pattern of substance use , leading
to clinically significant impairment or distress,
as manifested by three (or more) of the
following, occurring at any time in the same
12-month period - A great deal of time is spent in activities
necessary to obtain the substance, use the
substance, or recover from its effects
5DSM-IV Substance Dependence
- A maladaptive pattern of substance use , leading
to clinically significant impairment or distress,
as manifested by three (or more) of the
following, occurring at any time in the same
12-month period - Important social, occupational, or recreational
activities are given up or reduced because of
substance use
6DSM-IV Substance Dependence
- A maladaptive pattern of substance use , leading
to clinically significant impairment or distress,
as manifested by three (or more) of the
following, occurring at any time in the same
12-month period - The substance use is continued despite knowledge
of having a persistent or recurrent physical or
psychological problem that is likely to have been
caused or exacerbated by the substance
7Pseudoaddiction
- Pattern of drug seeking behavior of pain patients
receiving inadequate pain management that can be
mistaken for addiction - Cravings and aberrant behavior
- Concerns about availability, specific drug
requests - Clock-watching
- Unsanctioned dose escalation
- Resolves with reestablishing analgesia
Weissman DE, Haddox JD. Oploid pseudo addiction-
an iatrogenic syndrome. Pain 198936363.
8Craving / Preoccupation
- Frequent missed appointments unless opioid
renewal expected - Resistance to non-opioid interventions
- Unable to tolerate many medications
- Requests medications with high reward
- No relief with anything except opioids
9Aberrant Behaviors Suggestive of Addiction
- Injecting oral / transdermal medications
- Obtaining drugs on the street
- Prescription forgery
- Diversion / selling
- Lost prescriptions
- Seeking prescriptions from other clinicians / ER
without informing primary prescriber - Deterioration in function (work, family, social)
- Concurrent alcohol / other drug abuse
10Management of Acute Pain in the Addicted Patient
- Distinguish between recovery, remote history of
use, opioid maintenance, or active addiction - Expect a lower pain threshold
- Expect a higher medication tolerance
- Define the pain, and provide specific treatment
11Management of Acute Pain in the Addicted Patient
- Actively treat non-opioid addiction during
episode of chronic pain
12Management of Acute Pain in the Addicted Patient
- Scheduled or PCA administration of opioids is
preferable to prn meds. - Asking for prn may be seen as drug seeking
- Delays are avoided, providing effective pain
relief and avoidance of withdrawal - Administration is not symptom-contingent, so
reinforcement of pain symptoms are minimized
13Management of Acute Pain in the Recovering Addict
- Recovering patients benefit from increasing
recovery activities during times of pain - Distress over inadequately treated pain may pose
greater risk of relapse than exposure to opioids - Often there is resistance to
- treatment with opioids
14Management of Acute Pain in the Opioid
Maintenance Patient
- Must have baseline opioid requirements met in
addition to medication needed for pain - Continue baseline methadone when possible and add
other mu agonist for pain - If unable to take methadone orally, can
administer parenterally at half the oral dose
15Management of Acute Pain in the Opioid
Maintenance Patient
- For buprenorphine maintained patients, if the
pain is anticipated, switch to full mu agonist 3
days in advance - May continue buprenorphine, increase dose to tid
/ qid for analgesic dosing - May use high potency mu opioids for breakthrough
- Be aware of precipitating withdrawal when
switching back to buprenorphine from full mu
agonist
16Opioid Induced Hyperalgesia
- MMTP patients have lower pain thresholds than
controls, cocaine addicts and former heroin users
not on methadone - Source Cold-pressor pain intolerance in opiate
and cocaine abusers correlates of drug type and
user status. Journal of Pain and Symptom
Management. 19949462-473
17Management of Acute Pain in the Patient with
Active Addiction
- Aggressively treat non-opioid addiction
- For opioid dependent patients, expect high
tolerance - Prevent withdrawal in addition to adequate
analgesia
18Management of Chronic Pain in Addiction
- Goals
- Reduction in pain
- Improvement in pain-related symptoms
- Sleep disturbance, depression, anxiety
- Restoration of function
- Elimination of unnecessary dependence on
medication
19Guidelines for management of chronic pain in the
addicted patient
- Comprehensive assessment including detailed drug
use history - Consider primary therapy directed at underlying
cause of pain (eg, radiation) - Begin appropriate pharmacotherapy
- Consider adjunctive treatments anesthetic,
surgical, neurostimulation - Integrate treatment with addiction services,
psychiatric services, and pain services
20Guidelines for management of chronic pain in the
addicted patient
- Create requirements for monitoring
- Frequent visits
- Written contracts with little flexibility
- Single prescriber
- Single pharmacy
- Frequent urine drug screens with active addict,
aberrant behavior
21Management of Chronic Pain in Addiction
- Physical modalities
- Stretching, ice, heat, exercise, TENS, nerve
blocks, trigger point injections - Cognitive-Behavioral interventions
- Relaxation, cognitive restructuring, changes in
behavioral response to pain - Invasive procedures
- Implanted spinal or peripheral nerve stimulators,
implanted spinal infusions - Medications
- Opioid, non-opioid
22The Four As of Pain Treatment Outcomes
- Analgesia (pain relief)
- Activities of Daily Living (psychosocial
functioning) - Adverse effects (side effects)
- Aberrant drug taking (addiction-related outcomes)
Passik Weinreb, 1998
23Integrated Treatment Approach for Chronic Pain
Individualized Care Plan
24RELAPSE
25Problem With Addictive Illness RELAPSE!!!
- 3 Triggers for relapse
- 1) Stress
- 2) Any mood altering substance
- 3) Environmental Cues
- The Issue Acute Care view of a Chronic
- Disease
-
- Relapse occurs with the other chronic
illnesses!
26The Memory of Drugs
Amygdalaactivated
Amygdalanot lit up
Front of Brain
Back of Brain
Nature Video
Cocaine Video
27Remember
- Relapse is A PART OF THE DISEASE
- Expect there to be recurrent DENIAL
- Revert to Brief Intervention Technique
- Utilize leverage boss, family members, friends
- Remember Not everyone makes it but dont give
up trying
28CONCLUSION
29 The Message OfAddiction Medicine
- Addiction is a chronic brain disease
- Addiction is treatable (i.e. like DM, HTN)
- People get better
- Treatment works
- Recovery is very possible
- Addicted people in all stages of addiction and
recovery should receive our compassion as well as
equality and non-discrimination
30Where Society Needs to Go
- Move to education/prevention/treatment
- Access to care (PARITY)
- Alternatives to incarceration (drug courts)
- Education of health care professionals
- Interface law enforcement/health care
- Educate our legislators
31Sue Shivers on Change
- If you keep on doing what youve always done,
you keep on getting what youve always got If
nothing changes, nothing changes
32Societys Hope --- You
- Continue to educate yourself
- Be aware of the scope of the problem
- Share your knowledge with colleagues
- Develop a plan for your practice
- Become an educator of your patients/clients,
legislators, and society - Support health care
- professionals/others
- in recovery
33Strong In The Broken Places
- The personal wounds of Addiction, mended and
strengthened by ongoing recovery can give your
patient a Powerful Voice filled with rich
insight and wisdom
34Resources
- http//alcoholscreening.org
- http//www.niaaa.nih.gov
- http//www.nida.nih.gov
- http//csat.samhsa.gov/
- http//csap.samhsa.gov
- http//jointogether.org
- http//www.asam.org
- http//www.advocatehealth.com/amg/about/locations/
addiction
35 More Resources.
- Principles of Addiction Medicine
- NIDA Principles of Treatment
- NIAAA MATCH Manuals
- SAMHSA
- Join Together
- American Society of Addiction Medicine
- Call MPHP (1/800-844-1446)
- Go to 10 Open AA Meetings
36Screening Instruments
Self-Report Questionnaires andStructured
Interviews
- CAGE questionnaire
- Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test (AUDIT)
- Michigan Alcoholism Screening Test (MAST)
- Brief MAST (BMAST)
- TWEAK questionnaire
37Screening InstrumentsBrief Screening
Questionnaires
IntendedSetting
Cutoff Value
Questions (Scoring)
ScreeningTool
Sensitivity
61-100
Clinical
2
4 (1 point each)
CAGE
38-94
Clinical (adolescents)
8
10 (0-4 points each)
AUDIT
30-78
Clinicaland nonclinical
6
10 (0-4 points each)
BMAST
70-90
Clinical(pregnantwomen)
2
5 (0-2 points each)
TWEAK
Indicates questionnaires that can be
self-administered. Source Cherpitel CJ. Alcohol
Health Res World. 199721348-351.
38Alcohol Dependence Screening Tool CAGE
Questionnaire
- Have you ever felt you should CUT down on your
drinking? - Have people ANNOYED you by criticizing your
drinking? - Have you ever felt bad or GUILTY about your
drinking? - Have you ever had a drink first thing in the
morning to steady your nerves or get rid of a
hangover (ie, EYE-OPENER)?
Source Cherpitel CJ. Alcohol Health Res World.
199721(4)348-351.
39Alcohol Dependence Screening Tool AUDIT
Questionnaire
- 1. How often do you have a drink containing
alcohol? - 2. How many drinks containing alcohol do you
have on a typical daywhen you are drinking? - 3. How often do you have 6 or more drinks on 1
occasion? - 4. How often during the past year have you found
that you were not able to stop drinking once you
had started? - 5. How often during the past year have you
failed to do what was normally expected of you
because of drinking? - 6. How often during the past year have you
needed a first drink in the morning to get
yourself going after a heavy drinking session? - 7. How often during the past year have you had a
feeling of guilt or remorse after drinking? - 8. How often during the past year have you been
unable to remember what happened the night before
because you had been drinking? - 9. Have you or has someone else been injured as
a result of your drinking? - 10. Has a relative, friend, or a doctor or other
health care worker been concerned about your
drinking or suggested you cut down?
Source Saunders JB, et al. Addiction.
199388791-804.
40Alcohol Dependence Screening Tool BMAST
Questionnaire
- 1. Do you feel you are a normal drinker?
- 2. Do friends or relatives think you are a
normal drinker? - 3. Have you ever attended a meeting of
Alcoholics Anonymous (AA)? - 4. Have you ever lost friends or
girlfriends/boyfriends because of drinking? - 5. Have you ever gotten into trouble at work
because of drinking? - 6. Have you ever neglected your obligations,
your family, or your work for two or more days in
a row because you were drinking? - 7. Have you ever had delirium tremens (DTs),
severe shaking, heard voices, or seen things that
werent there after heavy drinking? - 8. Have you ever gone to anyone for help about
your drinking? - 9. Have you ever been in a hospital because of
drinking? - 10. Have you ever been arrested for drunk
driving or drivingafter drinking?
Source Pokorny AD, et al. Am J Psychiatry.
1972129342-345.
41Alcohol Dependence Screening Tool TWEAK
Questionnaire
- TOLERANCE How many drinks can you hold?
- Have close friends or relatives WORRIED
or complained about your drinking in the past
year? - EYE-OPENER Do you sometimes take a drink in
the morning when you first get up? - AMNESIA Has a friend or family member ever
told you about things you said or did while you
were drinking that you could not remember? - Do you sometimes feel the need to C(K)UT DOWN
- on your drinking?
Source Cherpitel CJ. Alcohol Health Res World.
199721348-351.
42Alcohol Withdrawal
- Benzodiazepines are the drug of choice to detox
from Alcohol. Only drug proven to diminish
withdrawal symptoms, prevent seizures and
Delirium Tremens - Phenytoin is not indicated
- Thiamine 100 mg IM, then P.O. 4 6 wks
- Magnesium Sulfate
43Alcohol Abstinence Adjuncts
- Disulfiram (Antabuse) 50 yrs
- Naltrexone (Revia) - 1994
- Acamprosate (Campral) - 2004
- Extended Release Naltrexone (Vivitrol)
-
2006 - Caution Any ETOH Abstinence Adjunct should be
coupled with psychosocial support
44Disulfiram
- Inhibits Aldehyde Dehydrogenase
- VA Study (Fuller) no more effective than placebo
in general population - PHP experience Useful in professional
monitoring group - Some utility in those that request it
45Oral Naltrexone
- Adjunctive therapy to behavioral treatments for
alcoholism and opiate addiction (FDA 94) - 40 increase in 90-day abstinence
- No significant difference at 1 year
- Expensive
46New Research
- Naltrexone for extended-release injectable
suspension (Vivitrol) - Once monthly injection
- Recently approved, well tolerated, safe
- Expensive (about 800/mo.)
- Many insurances do cover
- (JAMA April 05)
47Acamprosate ( Campral)
- Glutamate stabilization and GABA effects
- ? Reduce protracted withdrawal
- Safe, well tolerated
- 50 decrease in relapse in 14 of 15 European
Trials - Recently approved for use in USA
- JAMA 5/06 Not effective
48Neuroadaptation Potential for Relapse
Normal
Tolerance
Acute Alcohol Intake
Adaptation
Alcohol
Alcohol
Excitation(Glutamate)
Inhibition(GABA)
Post-Acute Withdrawal and Cue-Induced Responses
Acute Withdrawal
C
Adaptation
Campral may balance glutamate overactivity thus
reducing the potential for relapse
49Alcohol Abuse
- DSM-IV-TR Criteria
- Maladaptive pattern of alcohol use leading to
clinically significant impairment or distress,
manifested within a12-month period by at least 1
of the following - Failure to fulfill role obligations at work,
school, or home - Recurrent use in hazardous situations
- Legal problems related to alcohol
- Continued use despite alcohol-related socialor
interpersonal problems
DSM-IV-TRDiagnostic and Statistical Manual of
Mental Disorders, 4th edition, text
revision. American Psychiatric Association. In
DSM-IV-TR. 2000.
50Alcohol Dependence
- DSM-IV-TR Criteria
- Maladaptive pattern of alcohol use leading to
clinicallysignificant impairment or distress,
manifested within a12-month period by at least 3
of the following - Tolerance
- Withdrawal
- Loss of control over amount of alcohol consumed
- Preoccupation with controlling drinking
- Preoccupation with drinking activities
- Impairment of social, occupational, or
recreational activities - Use is continued despite persistent problems
related to drinking
American Psychiatric Association. In DSM-IV-TR.
2000.
51Indications for Inpatient Detoxification (Alcohol)
- History of withdrawal seizures or complications
- Depression with suicidal ideation
- The presence of severe coexisting medical or
psychiatric conditions - Extremely unstable home situation
- Failure to respond to outpatient treatment
52Management of Alcohol Withdrawal
- Hourly nursing evaluation using CIWA scale
- Thiamine prior to glucose containing fluids
- Multivitamins folate
- Correct deficits of Potassium, Magnesium, Glucose
and Phosphate - PO Benzodiazepines for CIWA gt 8 (long acting
unless liver failure) - I-V Diazepam for delerium
- Add Phenobarbitol or Propofol if refractory
53Management of Opioid Overdose Withdrawal
- Rescue breathing
- Naloxone
- Withdrawal
- Methadone
- Buprenorphine
- Clonidine adjuntive medications
54OAK GROVE FAMILY CLINIC RECOVERY CONTRACT
AGREEMENT I, _________________________,
understand I have been diagnosed with Chemical
Dependency. In an effort to preserve my
health, I do hereby agree to the following
terms 1. I agree to avoid all
mood altering substances including alcohol and
over-the- counter
prescriptions without the prior approval of my
primary physician, Gary
Carr, M.D. 2. I agree to take Antabuse and/or
Naltrexone if requested to do so by Dr.
Carr. 3. I agree to make all
scheduled appointments with Dr. Carr or
physicians he may refer
me to. 4. I agree to see no
physician other than Dr. Gary Carr or physicians
he may refer me to with the
exception of emergencies. In case of an
emergency, I will notify Dr. Carr of the need to
see another physician and
medications prescribed within twenty-four (24)
hours. 5. I agree to make six
(6) AA/NA meetings per week (Note Evenings
in outpatient treatment
count as a meeting.)
6. My sponsor is ______________________,
Phone _____________________.
Dr. Carr may freely communicate any concerns
regarding my recovery with my
sponsor. 7. In case of
relapse, Dr. Carr may contact ____________________
___________
__________________________________________________
_____________ Phone
______________________Address ____________________
_________ If I relapse, I
agree to immediately enter into an inpatient
evaluation with further
treatment as indicated. 8. I
agree to submit to random, witnessed, unannounced
chain-of-custody urine
alcohol and drug screens when called. Failure to
present for urine drug
screening is considered a positive screen and
will prompt calls to my
sponsor and identified contact(s).
NOTE A missed screen is viewed as a positive
screen.
55RE Recovery Contract Agreement Page Two
9. I understand failure to adhere to each of
the stipulations above, use of
alcohol and/or drugs, or failure to submit to
timely screens will be considered
a violation of this contract, and need for
further treatment.
10. I agree that Dr. Carr and other parties
referenced in this contract may freely
communicate regarding my recovery.
I have read and
understand the requirements of this contract. I
agree to abide fully with the requirements set
forth. ____________________________________ _____
_________________ Participant Date _________
___________________________
______________________ Gary D. Carr,
M.D. Date ___________________________________
_ ______________________ Witness Date cc
Patient Sponsor Contact Person(s)