18 research outputs found
Impulsivity and Treatment Outcomes in Individuals with Cocaine Use Disorder: Examining the Gap between Interest and Adherence
Background: Impulsivity is implicated in the development and maintenance of Cocaine Use Disorder (CUD). Less work has examined impulsivity’s role on interest in initiating treatment, treatment adherence, or treatment response. No pharmacotherapies are approved for CUD, so efforts to understand and bolster the effects of psychotherapy are important in guiding and refining treatment. The present study examined the impact of impulsivity on interest in treatment, treatment initiation, treatment adherence, and treatment outcomes in individuals with CUD. Methods: Following the completion of a larger study on impulsivity and CUD participants were offered 14 sessions of (12 weeks) Cognitive Behavioral Relapse Prevention (CBT-RP). Before starting treatment, participants completed seven self-report and four behavioral measures of impulsivity. Sixty-eight healthy adults (36% female) with CUD (aged 49.4 ± 7.9) expressed an interest in treatment. Results: Greater scores on several self-report measures of impulsivity, and fewer difficulties with delayed gratification were associated with increased interest in treatment in both males and females. 55 participants attended at least 1 treatment session, while 13 participants did attend a single session. Individuals who attended at least one treatment session scored lower on measures of lack of perseverance and procrastination. Still, measures of impulsivity did not reliably predict session attendance nor the frequency of cocaine-positive urine samples throughout treatment. Males attended nearly twice as many treatment sessions as females despite nonsignificant associations between impulsivity in males and the number of sessions attended. Conclusions: Greater impulsivity in individuals with CUD was associated with expressing an interest in treatment, but not treatment adherence or response.</p
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Context-dependent effects of CB1 cannabinoid gene disruption on anxiety-like and social behaviour in mice.
Contrasting data were reported regarding the effects of cannabinoids on anxiety and social behaviour in both animals and humans. The cognitive effects of cannabinoids and their interactions with the HPA-axis raise the possibility that cannabinoid effects are context but not behaviour specific. To assess this hypothesis, we submitted CB1 receptor knock-out (CB1-KO) and wild-type (WT) mice to tests, which involved similar behaviours, but the behavioural context was different. The elevated plus-maze test was performed under less and more anxiogenic conditions, i.e. under low and high light, respectively. We also compared the social behaviour of the two genotypes in the resident/intruder and social interaction tests. Both tests represent a social challenge and induce similar behaviours, but involve different contexts. The behaviour of CB1-KO and WT mice was similar under low light, but CB1 gene disruption increased anxiety-like behaviour under the high light condition. CB1 gene disruption promoted aggressive behaviour in the home-cage, whereas it inhibited social behaviour in the unfamiliar cage. Thus, the anxiogenic-like effect was restricted to the more stressful unfamiliar environment. These data suggest that the effects of CB1 gene disruption were context and not behaviour specific. Novelty stress resulted in higher ACTH levels in CB1-KOs than in WTs, which suggests that context dependency occurred in conjunction with an altered HPA axis function. The present data at least partly explain contrasting effects of cannabinoids in different contexts as well as in different species and strains that show differential stress responses and coping strategies.Comparative StudyJournal ArticleResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov'tFLWINinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishe
Comparison between heroin and heroin-cocaine polyabusers: a psychopathological study
The concomitant use of cocaine by heroin-dependent subjects,
or by patients on methadone maintenance treatment, is a relevant
phenomenon that determines the negative consequences on health, social
adjustment, and outcome of opioid addiction treatment. Little is known
about the patterns of co-use of these two substances and the pathophysiological
alterations following this condition. Only a few studies have
evaluated the neurochemical effects in subjects carrying this specific
pattern of abuse. Similarly, the impact of cocaine abuse on psychiatric
and social function in subjects already affected by opioid addiction is
still poorly understood and further studies are necessary to investigate
this specific area that could profoundly affect methadone maintenance
treatment. The aim of this article is to investigate the psychopathological
symptoms of heroin–cocaine abuse in a group of heroin addicts applying
for treatment. Results show a direct relationship between cocaine abuse
and a higher rate of psychiatric disorders, but a negative correlation with
the severity of self-rated psychopathology