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ENGAGING AND RETAINING COMPLEX CLIENTS IN PHARMACOTHERAPY TREATMENT

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Title: ENGAGING AND RETAINING COMPLEX CLIENTS IN PHARMACOTHERAPY TREATMENT


1
ENGAGING AND RETAINING COMPLEX CLIENTS IN
PHARMACOTHERAPY TREATMENT
  • Martin Jackson
  • November 2005

2
Aims of The Talk
  • Describe the acute and chronic cognitive and
    behavioural presentations of substance-related
    ABI
  • Outline important issues regarding treatment and
    therapy for a person with an ABI
  • Describe how an ABI can impact on a persons daily
    functioning
  • Outlines ways of intervening for cognitive and
    behavioural problems

3
SUBSTANCE RELATED BRAIN INJURY(SRBI)
4
SRBI CONSISTENT RESEARCH FINDINGS
  • All substances have an acute intoxicating effect
    (and withdrawal effect) that produces changes in
    cognition, usually in the areas of attention,
    memory and executive function
  • All substances have the potential to produce an
    acute brain injury, generally related to
    overintoxication (overdoses) and its secondary
    effects (hypoxia etc)

5
SRBI CONSISTENT RESEARCH FINDINGS
  • Most substances (if not all) will produce an
    acquired brain injury in the long term
  • There is a consistent theme in the drug and
    alcohol literature that initial research into a
    substance suggests that there is no brain injury
    from the substance, but years later this is shown
    to be not true

6
RELATIONSHIP TO DOSAGE
  • Dosage related issues arise from
  • The direct neurotoxic effect on the brain
  • Generally, the greater the dose, the greater the
    neurotoxic effect.
  • The probability of an acute neurological event
    (such as a stroke) is higher.
  • Indirect effects such as respiratory and blood
    flow
  • Generally, the greater the dose, the greater the
    probability of secondary complications
  • Important factors include whether consciousness
    was lost, how long the down, was resuscitation
    needed

7
RELATIONSHIP TO LENGTH OF USE
  • Generally, the longer a substance is used for the
    greater the probability of direct cognitive
    impairment both in terms of occurrence and
    degree.
  • Generally, the longer a substance is used for the
    greater the probability of indirect secondary
    complications.
  • There is not necessarily a simple interaction
    between dosage and length of use.

8
ALCOHOL
  • It is the main cause of ABI in the 40 to 55 age
    group.
  • Affects people in two ways
  • Thinking, emotion and behaviour
  • (memory and executive functioning)
  • Physical movement
  • Major medical problems
  • Cerebellar ataxia
  • Peripheral neuropathy
  • Head Injury
  • Liver disease
  • Other neurological disorders
  • Seizures

9
MAIN FEATURES OF THE ALCOHOL AMNESIC SYNDROME
  • Immediate memory is not affected
  • Difficulty remembering recent events or recently
    learned information
  • Achronogenesis - loss of time tags
  • Retrieving information stored in memory
  • Confabulation - a tendency to make up memories
  • Preserved learned behaviour

10
ALCOHOL RELATED EXECUTIVE DYSFUNCTION
  • Difficulties with
  • Attention and concentration
  • Planning, organisation, problem solving
  • Complex, abstract and flexible thinking
  • Initiative
  • Emotional and behavioural change
  • Self awareness and insight

11
(No Transcript)
12
HYPOXIC BRAIN INJURY NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL FEATURES
  • Mild hypoxia - inattentiveness, poor judgement
    and motor inco-ordination - no lasting effects
  • Moderate to severe hypoxia (e.g. cardiac arrest)
    - consciousness is lost within seconds, but
    recovery is likely to be complete if breathing,
    oxygenation of blood and cardiac action are
    restored within five minutes. Beyond five
    minutes there is usually permanent damage which
    correlates with the length of "down time".
  • Deterioration in function can occur over the
    months following the episode as nerve cells "drop
    out". Demyelination can continue to occur over
    time also.

13
NEUROPATHOLOGY OF HYPOXIA
  • Areas of the brain most likely to be affected
    include
  • "Watershed areas" (e.g. parieto-occipital area)
    which lie on the borders between the major
    cerebral arteries. Often are the first to
    experience a decrease in blood flow.
  • Large cells of the hippocampus and cerebellum
    (generally have higher oxygen uptake, so are
    therefore vulnerable to lack of oxygen).
  • Subcortical structures are particular vulnerable
    to carbon monoxide poisoning

14
HYPOXIC BRAIN INJURY
  • Neuropsychological effects can be highly variable
    and along a continuum from localized to
    generalized.
  • Permanent anterograde amnesia with preserved
    performance on other tasks can exist.
  • May or may not have retrograde amnesia
  • Can have global impairment leading to dementia in
    more severe cases
  • Visual deficits are common

15
BENZODIAZEPINES
  • Short term neurological effects
  • Act at limbic, thalamic and hypothalamic levels
  • Primary effects are anxiolytic, sedative,
    hypnotic, muscle relaxant and anticonvulsant
  • CNS effects are drowsiness, ataxia, fatigue,
    confusion, weakness and vertigo
  • Long terms physical effects
  • Physiological and pharmacological dependence
  • Withdrawal symptoms

16
BENZODIAZEPINES
  • Short term cognitive effects
  • Anterograde amnesia is common and severity is
    dose dependent, memory for information presented
    under the influence is impaired
  • Reported cognitive problems with verbal fluency,
    psychomotor speed, reaction time, attention,
    episodic memory, semantic memory
  • No retrograde amnesia

17
BENZODIAZEPINES
  • Long term cognitive effects
  • Whilst acute and subacute effects are well
    documented, chronic effects are less well known
  • In chronic users, effects continue for some time
    after substance use is ceased
  • There is evidence of (episodic) memory impairment
    that is independent of the sedative effect
  • There is also impairment of
  • concentration, attention, vigilance, speed of
    processing, sustained attention
  • Visuospatial skills (not seen in acute stage)
  • May improve after stopping

18
MARIJUANA
  • Physical/Neurological effects
  • Increased rate of heart rate, but low blood
    pressure with resultant risk of increased stroke
  • PET scans show increased cerebral blood flow
    (CBF) in paralimbic areas (orbital and mesial
    frontal lobes, temporal poles, cingulate and
    cerebellum) related to mood effects
  • PET scans show decreased CBF in attention network
    (parietal lobe, frontal lobe, thalamus, temporal
    cortex)

19
MARIJUANA
  • Short term effects low dose
  • thinking and short term memory problems
  • distorted judgement and sense of time and space
  • relaxation and loss of inhibition
  • increased appetite
  • impaired coordination and balance
  • reddened eyes
  • feeling faint

20
MARIJUANA
  • Short term effects high dose
  • Confusion
  • Restlessness
  • Feelings of excitement
  • Hallucinations
  • Anxiety or panic
  • Decreased reaction time
  • paranoia

21
MARIJUANA
  • Long term consequences
  • impaired concentration, memory and the ability to
    learn
  • a moderate decrease in IQ
  • reduced verbal abilities (young users)
  • disturbed sleep patterns
  • amotivational syndrome

22
SOLVENTS
  • Acute symptoms include euphoria, giddiness,
    headache, ataxia, confusion, perceptual
    distortions, hallucinations
  • High levels of acute exposure result in severe
    encephalopathy (nystagmus, diplopia, dysarthria,
    convulsions and coma)
  • Chronic effects are less well known and are
    inconsistent across studies headaches, fatigue,
    irritability, memory impairment, depression, loss
    of drive and emotional instability

23
SOLVENTS
  • Neuropathology - MRI scans have show atrophy,
    white matter hyperintensity, hypointensity of
    basal ganglia and thalamus. SPECT scans have
    shown a decrease in regional cerebral blood flow
    in the bilateral prefrontal cortex.
  • Neuropathological and neuropsychological
    impairments are similar to those seen in
    subcortical dementias (rostral brain stem,
    thalamus, basal ganglia, red nucleus and
    substantia nigra)

24
SOLVENTS
  • A correlation exists between the degree of
    neurological impairment and white matter disease.
    Frontal hypoperfusion may related to
    amotivational syndrome.
  • Neuropsychological studies have shown a wide
    range of cognitive impairments including
    information processing speed, fine motor
    dysfunction, auditory discrimination, attention,
    memory, visuomotor function, psychosocial
    functioning

25
THINGS GENERALLY NOT AFFECTED IN SRBI
  • Vocabulary and language
  • Long term memory
  • Any well learned skills
  • Knowledge of facts and understanding of the world
  • Knowledge of the social world
  • SRBI is sometimes called the invisible disability
    because the person is still good at many things

26
CONCLUSIONS ABOUT SUBSTANCE RELATED BRIAN INJURY
  • Assuming you are an adult and do not suffer an
    acute neurological event, those at risk of
    developing an ABI are
  • those who use a substance for at least ten years
    (if not fifteen)
  • use above a particular threshold
  • are over the age of 40

27
CONCLUSIONS ABOUT SUBSTANCE RELATED BRIAN INJURY
  • The common long term cognitive and behavioural
    sequelae of substance related brain injury are
  • Slowed speed of processing
  • Attention impairments
  • New learning and memory impairment
  • Executive impairment (planning and organisation,
    problems solving, abstract and flexible thinking)
  • Problems with impulse control, emotional control
    and insight

28
ISSUES RELATED TO THERAPY AND INTERVENTION
29
TREATMENT ISSUES
  • To participate in therapy or to change behaviour
    a person needs to
  • know that there is an issue and what the issue is
  • identify triggers and be able to think of a
    number of alternative solutions
  • predict what the outcome of each solution may be
  • decide what action to take
  • carry out that action
  • monitor performance
  • change behaviour as required

30
TREATMENT ISSUES
  • This clearly requires reasonable
  • attention
  • memory
  • planning and organisation
  • flexibility
  • impulse control

31
UNDERTAKING THERAPY WITH A CLIENT WITH SRBI
  • The way this is done will depend on the clients
    cognitive abilities
  • Asking a client to do things that are not
    cognitively possible only leads to failure
  • Concrete and inflexible thinking, as well as a
    lack of insight are the biggest barriers to
    counselling clients and trying to get behaviour
    change
  • There is a tendency to relapse back to old and
    well-learned behaviours

32
Awareness and Insight
  • Awareness
  • Insight

YES
YES
NO
NO
YES
NO
YES
NO
33
IMPACT OF AN ABI ON DAILY FUNCTIONING
34
IMPACT OF ATTENTION DEFICITS ON DAILY FUNCTIONING
  • Misses details
  • Is slow to complete tasks
  • Cant do two things at once
  • Gets overwhelmed by two much information
  • Gets distracted easily
  • Makes mistakes

35
IMPACT OF MEMORY DEFICITS ON DAILY FUNCTIONING
  • Find it hard to learn or remember new things
  • Forget things they have done
  • Forget things they are supposed to do
  • Remember things incorrectly or get details mixed
    up
  • Forget things they are told
  • Lose things

36
IMPACT OF EXECUTIVE DEFICITS ON DAILY FUNCTIONING
  • Have problems working out the steps of a task
  • Have trouble organising their thoughts and
    explaining things to others
  • Have trouble of thinking of possible solutions to
    a problem
  • Have trouble making decisions
  • Having trouble thinking of alternative solutions
    to a problem
  • Having trouble seeing the consequences of their
    actions
  • Having trouble monitoring their actions and
    behaviours and know that there is anything wrong
  • Having trouble changing their ideas, actions and
    behaviours

37
IMPACT OF BEHAVIOUR DEFICITS ON DAILY FUNCTIONING
  • Get irritable and distressed and can't cope
  • Have trouble with getting going - may appear
    unmotivated and apathetic, but will do things
    when prompted
  • Have a low frustration tolerance and lose their
    temper quickly
  • Be very self-centred - don't consider others,
    appreciate what others do for them and appear
    selfish
  • Have a quickly changing mood and laugh or cry
    inappropriately
  • Be perseverative - talk about the same topics or
    do the same tasks repeatedly
  • Be impulsive and disinhibited

38
IMPACT OF LANGUAGE DEFICITS ON DAILY FUNCTIONING
  • Have trouble understanding what is being said to
    them
  • Have trouble speaking or finding the right words
    to say
  • Talk in gibberish
  • Having trouble picking up social or nonverbal cues

39
STRATEGIES TO ASSIST ATTENTION
  • Problem - Slow information processing speed
  • Strategy - give the person more time
  • Problem - multiple task processing
  • Strategy - do only one thing at a time
  • Problem - can't focus, distractible
  • Strategy - keep environment quiet and free of
    distractions
  • Problem - can't cope with too many steps to a
    task
  • Strategy - keep tasks simple, not too long, with
    only a few steps

40
STRATEGIES TO ASSIST MEMORY
  • Problem - impaired immediate memory span or
    working memory, easily overloaded
  • Strategy - break down information or tasks into
    smaller chunks and only give a little bit of
    information at a time
  • Problem - forgets what has done, been told
  • Strategy - write things down (diary, whiteboard
    etc) as prompts to remember, repeat information,
    give information in more than one modality
  • Problem - forgets what us supposed to do
  • Strategy - again write things down, give prompts
    or reminders just before the activity (e.g. a
    phone call), go and get them
  • Problem - confabulates
  • Strategy - you cannot change this behaviour, you
    need to check or verify what they are saying
    before you accept it as the truth

41
STRATEGIES TO ASSIST COMMUNICATION
  • Problem - understanding what is being said to
    them
  • Strategy repeat information, speak slowly,
    visual cues
  • Problem - speaking or finding the right words to
    say
  • Strategy use visual cues, verbal cues
  • Problem - picking up social or nonverbal cues
  • Strategy behavioural intervention

42
STRATEGIES TO ASSIST EXECUTIVE FUNCTIONS
  • Problem - planning and organisation
  • Strategy - will need an external source to help
    set up routines (where appropriate) and to help
    organise things
  •  
  • Problem - concrete and inflexible thinking
  • Strategy - don't expect them to think of
    alternatives or change their behaviour, will need
    you to think of alternatives for them
  • Problem - problem solving and decision making
  • Strategy - it is important that the person makes
    their own decisions (where possible), but it is
    up to the carer to provide them with all the
    possibilities and consequences to assist them
    make that decision
  • Problem - disinhibited, impulsive
  • Strategy - a clear and consistent message about
    what is appropriate behaviour, set up situations
    to minimise harm to self and others
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