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Co-occurring psychotic and addictive disorders: neurobiology and diagnosis
Ross, Stephen; Peselow, Eric
ABSTRACT: Psychosis and substance abuse are intimately related. Psychotic spectrum illnesses commonly co-occur with substance use disorders (SUDs), and many substances of abuse can cause or exacerbate psychotic symptoms along a temporal spectrum from acute to chronic presentations. Despite the common co-occurrence between psychotic spectrum illnesses and SUDs, they are often under-recognized and undertreated, leading to poor treatment outcomes. Accurate detection and diagnosis of individuals with psychotic illness co-occurring with addictive disorders is key to properly treat such disorders. This article will review the nature of the relationship between psychosis and substance abuse by examining prevalence rates of each disorder alone and their rates of co-occurrence, the neurobiological basis for substance abuse comorbidity in schizophrenia spectrum disorders, key and salient aspects related to accurate diagnosis along a continuum from acute to subacute to chronic conditions, and pitfalls associated with diagnostic dilemmas. A case example will be used to highlight key points related to diagnostic challenges.
PMID: 22986797
ISSN: 0362-5664
CID: 178237
Serotonergic hallucinogens and emerging targets for addiction pharmacotherapies
Ross, Stephen
PMID: 22640760
ISSN: 0193-953X
CID: 167803
A WED-BASED MODULE ON NEUROBIOLOGY TO ENGAGE STUDENTS IN SUBSTANCE ABUSE RESEARCH [Meeting Abstract]
Truncali, Andrea; Gillespie, Colleen; Lee, Joshua; Ross, Stephen; Kerr, David; Huben, Laura; More, Frederick; Naegle, Madeline; Kalet, Adina; Gourevitch, Marc
ISI:000208812703296
ISSN: 1525-1497
CID: 2782362
A Web-Based Module on Neurobiology to Engage Students in Substance Abuse Research [Meeting Abstract]
Truncali, A.; Lee, J. D.; Gillespie, C.; Ross, S.; Kerr, D.; Huben, L.; Kalet, A. L.; Moore, F.; Naegle, M.; Gourevitch, M. N.
ISI:000287030800022
ISSN: 0889-7077
CID: 128810
Working with dually diagnosed patients
Chapter by: Ross, Stephen
in: Handbook of motivation and change: A practical guide for clinicians by Levounis, Petros; Arnaout, Bachaar [Eds]
Arlington, VA, US: American Psychiatric Publishing, Inc.; US, 2010
pp. 7105-7110
ISBN: 978-1-58562-370-9
CID: 5341
BARRIERS TO END-OF-LIFE (EOL) CARE IN THE INTENSIVE CARE UNIT (ICU): PERCEPTIONS VARY BY LEVEL OF TRAINING, DISCIPLINE, AND INSTITUTION [Meeting Abstract]
Friedenberg, A; Levy, M; Ross, S; Evans, L
ISI:000272509900770
ISSN: 0090-3493
CID: 106967
The neurobiology of addictive disorders
Ross, Stephen; Peselow, Eric
Addiction is increasingly understood as a neurobiological illness where repetitive substance abuse corrupts the normal circuitry of rewarding and adaptive behaviors causing drug-induced neuroplastic changes. The addictive process can be examined by looking at the biological basis of substance initiation to the progression of substance abuse to dependence to the enduring risk of relapse. Critical neurotransmitters and neurocircuits underlie the pathological changes at each of these stages. Enhanced dopamine transmission in the nucleus accumbens is part of the common pathway for the positively rewarding aspects of drugs of abuse and for initiation of the addictive process. F-Aminobutyric acid,opioid peptides, serotonin, acetylcholine, the endocannabinoids, and glutamate systems also play a role in the initial addictive process. Dopamine also plays a key role in conditioned responses to drugs of abuse, and addiction is now recognized as a disease of pathological learning and memory. In the path from substance abuse to addiction, the neurochemistry shifts from a dopamine-based behavioral system to a predominantly glutamate-based one marked by dysregulated glutamate transmission from the prefrontal cortex to the nucleus accumbens in relation to drug versus biologically oriented stimuli. This is a core part of the executive dysfunction now understood as one of the hallmark features of addiction that also includes impaired decision making and impulse dysregulation.Understanding the neurobiology of the addictive process allows for a theoretical psychopharmacological approach to treating addictive disorders,one that takes into account biological interventions aimed at particular stages of the illness
PMID: 19834992
ISSN: 1537-162x
CID: 104726
Pharmacotherapy of addictive disorders
Ross, Stephen; Peselow, Eric
Substance use disorders are highly prevalent in the United States and cause considerable damage to our society. They are underrecognized and undertreated despite a vast body of literature demonstrating the efficacy of treatment using both psychosocial and psychopharmacological modalities. For the last decade, research and progress into the biological basis of the addictive process has led to a rapidly growing number of pharmacological agents used to interrupt the addictive process at its various stages such as the initiation of substance abuse, the transition from abuse to dependence, and the prevention of drug reinstatement or relapse. Food and Drug Administration-approved medications exist for nicotine, alcohol, and opioid use disorders, and progress is being made to develop agents for stimulant use disorders. Regarding nicotine use disorders, nicotine replacement therapies,bupropion and varenicline, have Food and Drug Administration approval, and future options exist with endocannabinoid antagonists and immune therapy. Aversive agents, opiate antagonists, and glutamate based interventions are currently approved to treat alcohol use disorders with future promise with GABAergic, serotonergic, and endocannabinoid system agents. Opiate addiction is treated by approved agonist and antagonist mu-opioid medications with the future potential for agents that can modulate the stress systems and the iboga alkaloids. Although no pharmacotherapies are currently approved for cocaine addiction, promising lines of research include agents that affect dopaminergic, GABAergic, serotonergic,and glutamatergic systems as well as the promise for immune therapies
PMID: 19834993
ISSN: 1537-162x
CID: 104727
Medical versus Spiritual Orientations: Differential Patient Views toward Recovery
Cheney, Benjamin; Galanter, Marc; Dermatis, Helen; Ross, Stephen
Background: Relapse among patients in substance abuse treatment has generated interest in identifying attitudinal factors that sustain recovery. Objective: To assess the relationship of attitudes toward approaches to motivation for treatment and Twelve Step beliefs. Methods: Dually diagnosed patients (N = 100) completed a survey assessing treatment attitudes, motivation, and Twelve Step beliefs. Results: Endorsement of medical services was positively correlated with motivation but unrelated to Twelve Step beliefs. Endorsement of religious services was unrelated to motivation but was associated with Twelve Step beliefs. Conclusions: Patients may have differing perceptions regarding routes to recovery based on preferences for professional services or spiritual resources
PMID: 19637102
ISSN: 0095-2990
CID: 107367
Treating adult attention deficit hyperactivity disorder in hospitalized psychiatric patients [Case Report]
Castaneda, Ricardo; Levy, Robert; Hazzi, Charles; Ross, Stephen; Roman, William; Hamid, Hamada
OBJECTIVES: We intend to review the importance of appropriately recognizing and managing attention deficit/attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADD/ADHD) in the acute psychiatric hospital setting. METHODS: We demonstrate the management of three patients with associated ADD/ADHD diagnosis in the hospital setting. This case series is followed by a review of the literature on the treatment of ADD/ADHD with particular focus on inpatient treatment. RESULTS: Given that the core symptoms of ADD/ADHD are inattention, hyperactivity, poor concentration, impulsivity, poor organization and emotional instability, it follows that a comprehensive inpatient treatment plan should address these issues in order to obtain sustained, focused participation on the part of the patient. Suppression of ADD/ADHD symptoms with stimulants greatly enhanced our patients' ability to more productively and actively participate in the treatment of the acute psychiatric problems which led to their admission. CONCLUSIONS: Currently, no published data exist on prevalence of ADD/ADHD in psychiatric hospitals, rates of treatment and outcome of treatment with regard to recovery and quality of aftercare. Nonetheless, the benefits of treating ADD/ADHD among psychiatric inpatients may be seen in case examples and are also apparent in the data concerning treatment of ADD/ADHD in the dually diagnosed
PMID: 19061685
ISSN: 0163-8343
CID: 92178