Title: Precursors, Insulators, and Consequences of Inhalant Use
1Precursors, Insulators, and Consequences of
Inhalant Use
- RTI International
- Diana H. Fishbein, Ph.D. - Principal Investigator
- Christopher P. Krebs, Ph.D. - Co-Investigator
- Tara Williams, M.A. - Research Analyst
- Nancy Trevarthen, M.A. - Data Collection Task
Leader - Jane Hammond, Ph.D. Developmental Psychologist
- Barbara Flannery, Ph.D. - Psychopharmacologist
- Funded by
- National Institute on Drug Abuse
- (Grant R01 DA15935 )
2What do we know about inhalant users?
- Age of onset (mean 12) often precedes that of
other drugs and users are typically young - Males and females are equally as likely to use
inhalants - Inhalant use is associated with low SES, family
instability, and depression - Inhalant use varies somewhat by race/ethnicity
- Whites 9.7
- Hispanics 9.7
- Native Americans/Alaskan Natives 12.4
- Blacks 5.9
- NSDUH 2000 data, 12-17 year-olds, self-reported
lifetime inhalant use
3Lifetime Prevalence of Cocaine and Inhalant Use
NSDUH and MTF
4Background
- Evidence that inhalant use produces serious
cognitive, neurological, social, and behavioral
consequences - Existing research studies have employed
retrospective designs - There are no credible studies of the risk or
protective factors (i.e., precursors) for the
onset of inhalant use - So-called consequences may instead antedate use
and act as precursors that are, then, exacerbated
by subsequent inhalant use
5The Inhalants Project overcomes limitations of
existing research
- A stocked pond of inhalant users (Cicero, IL)
data from national evaluation study showed gt18
of 7th graders in Cicero reported using inhalants
in past 30 days - Prospective panel research design collects data
before onset and after inhalant use - Emphasis on neurocognitive precursors and
consequences - Studies interactions between neurocognitive,
psychosocial, background, cultural, and
experiential factors - Identifies differential etiological pathways to
inhalant use versus other drug use and no use
6Prospective Panel Research Design
- Three waves of data collection (perhaps more?)
- Most youth have not used drugs prior to baseline
- A proportion of youth will begin to use, some
chronically, over the course of the study
Primary caregivers are also interviewed at
baseline
7Likely Candidates for Vulnerability and
Exacerbating Effects
- Dimensions of cognitive and emotional functions
found to be predictive of substance abuse in
general and that are vulnerable to inhalants
adverse effects - Depression
- Cultural influences given concentrated pockets of
reported use - Parental history of drug use and mental illness,
involvement and disciplinary practices - Lack of knowledge within family and community
about inhalants - Peer attitudes and use
- Academic performance and school involvement
- A possible unique interaction between the above
factors
8Focal Point Executive Cognitive Function (ECF)
Deficits
- Compromises the ability to interpret social cues
during interpersonal interactions - Leads to misperceptions of threat or hostility in
conflict situations - Permits negative affective states and other
maladaptive responses to dominate - Heightened sensitivity to rewards
- Impulsivity and Inattention
- Insensitivity to Consequences
9Emotional Regulation
- PFC modulates functions of anterior cingulate and
limbic system - Substrate for motivation and emotion
- Ascribes feeling to environmental inputs
- Stimulates emotionally driven behaviors
- Physiological stress responses
- altered
- Serotonin and dopamine terminal
- projections involved in rewarding
- and addictive properties of drugs
- and other forms of novelty
10Disconnect in Brains Regulatory System may
Heighten Risk
- Regulatory neural circuitry b/t prefrontal cortex
and limbic system vulnerable to genetic variants,
developmental delays, injury, metabolic errors,
etc. - Deficits in prefrontal cortex associated with
disinhibition, insensitivity to penalty, impaired
decision making, dysregulated affect. - Instability in limbic system associated with
inability to perceive and regulate emotion poor
self regulation
11Chronic stress primes the brain for drug
self-administration
- Alters brain function, disengages coping
mechanisms, and compromises ability to execute
rational choices - Increases the likelihood of psychopathology
depression, drug abuse violent behavior - Genetic vulnerabilities affect particular
behavioral outcomes of stress - Positive attributes of individual or environment
provides protection from drug use.
12The Adolescent Brain
- Particularly vulnerable to environmental inputs,
including stress and drug effects - Effects are longstanding
- Prefrontal cortex not fully developed until early
adulthood - Unique stage of change in metabolism, pruning,
and increased efficiency in prefrontal function - Emotional centers (limbic) without checks and
balances - Greater sensitivity to rewards, less inhibition
- Seek altered states of consciousness
13Data Collected from Youth
- Demographic and Environmental neighborhood,
school, violence, gangs, peer use, etc. - Behavioral drug use, aggression, school, crime
- Attitudinal toward drugs, well being, safety
- Social/Psychological family functioning,
depression, peers, social supports, maltreatment - Neurocognitive
- Ravens Progressive Matrices non-verbal IQ
- Tower of London memory and executive cognitive
function - Stroop Interference Task cognitive flexibility
- Logan Stop-Signal Task impulsivity and
distractibility - Rogers Task risk taking and sensitivity to
consequences - Facial Recognition Task emotional recognition
14Current Status of Inhalants Project
- Successfully recruited and collected baseline
data from 553 dyads 10-12 yr olds and caregivers - More than half way through wave 2 of data
collection with gt300 youth retested - 94 retention rate
- Analysis of baseline data has commenced
- Descriptives
- Relationship between high risk behaviors and
cognitive function - Moderating effects of cognitive function on
relations between experiential factors and high
risk behaviors
15Background Data on Youth
- Gender 48 male
- Age
- 27 are 10
- 40 are 11
- 33 are 12
- Race/Ethnicity 90 Hispanic, 10 White
- Grade
- 10 in 4th
- 33 in 5th
- 41 in 6th
- 16 in 7th
16Attitudes Toward Drug Use
- 78 think using marijuana poses great risk
- 78 think using cocaine poses great risk
- 72 think using heroin poses great risk
- 54 think using inhalants poses great risk
- 39 think using inhalants is more harmful than
other illicit drugs
17Adversity Data on Youth
- 16 have seen family members beating each other
- 35 have witnessed neighborhood violence
- 15 have seen weapon used or someone threatened
with a weapon - Boys have significantly higher rates of early
trauma exposure and lifetime stressful events
than girls - Kids with problems tend to have multiple problems
not just one or two all or none
18Baseline Data on Drug Use
- 5 reported having used alcohol
- lt1 reported having used marijuana
- 3 reported having used inhalants
- Most who have tried drugs have done so only
once or twice and are 12 years old.
19Baseline Data on Primary Caregiver Sample
- Gender 46 male
- Age
- Range 25-72
- Mean 37
- Race/Ethnicity 94 Hispanic, 5 White
- Annual Income Mean 28,623
- 33 have graduated high school or obtained GED
- 26 have lived in the U.S. for less than 10 years
- 16 have hit their child with a belt, brush, or
stick in past 12 months - 35 have spanked their child with their hand
20Baseline Data on Primary Caregiver Sample, cont.
- 62 have talked to their children about the
dangers of using drugs many times in the past
12 months - 9 have not talked about drugs at all
- 38 have spoken to their children about the
dangers of using inhalants many times in the
past 12 months - 31 have not talked about inhalants at all
- 71 strongly agreed they wish they knew more
about what to say to their child about drugs - 15 strongly agreed and 34 agreed there are
places in the community they can turn to learn
more about how to prevent their child from using
drugs
21Factors Predicting Dysregulation (A Precursor to
Drug Abuse)
- Positive Outlook, Depression, and Symptoms of
PTSD. - Higher Emotional Abuse, Physical Abuse and
Physical Neglect scores (not sexual abuse or
emotional neglect). - Other experiential and background factors are
correlated highly significantly, but not when
considered relative to one another. - Interactions between child abuse and all primary
cognitive variables, esp IQ (e.g., child abuse
deficit dysreg) - Interactions between depression with all primary
cognitive variables, esp IQ (e.g., depression
deficit dysreg). - Regression analyses adjusted for age and gender
22Future of the Inhalants Project
- Scheduled to wrap-up data collection in early
2007 - Goals
- isolate risk and protective factors for and
consequences of inhalant use - Identify differential, developmental changes over
time - Generate much-needed data on the use and users of
inhalants - Inform the development and implementation of
targeted prevention programs - Conduct similar research in other places that are
plagued by inhalant use (e.g., Central and/or
South America)