Lecture 4 Flashcards

1
Q

Prevalence of substance use during pregnancy

A
Prevalences for entire pregnancy: 
Smoking - 25%
Drinking - 50%
Marijuana - 2.5%
Illicit drugs - < 1%

Highest prevalence in first trimester.

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2
Q

Risk factors for SU in pregnancy

A

Demographic Factors:
- eduction, income, age, ethnic background

Relational Factors:
- being married or single, Partner substance use, family functioning, social support

Psychological factors:
- such as life events, childhood trauma, psychopathology, stress

Other risk factors:

  • comorbidity (HIV, Hepatitis)
  • poor nutrition
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3
Q

Why is it so difficult to stop using during pregnancy?

A

Physiological changes:

  • auch as increase in blood volume, cardiac input, increased serotonin
  • hormonal

Psychological changes:
- stringer cravings - appetitive desire

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4
Q

Why should women stop using during pregnancy?

A

Harmful for mother,

BUT more harmful for development of baby and it’s brain

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5
Q

Placenta and substances

A

Placenta is the placenta passage for substances.

  • higher substance levels in fetus than mother
  • possible reuptake through amniotic fluid
  • longer circulation in fetus

E.g. alcohol and nicotine cross the barrier of the placenta.

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6
Q

Neonatal Abstinence Syndrome

A

Def.:
Syndrome that can appear after substance abuse during pregnancy that have affected the development of the child

  • CNS: tremors, jitteriness, irritability, excessive crying etc.
  • Metabolic and respiratory: hypertonia, temperature instability, sweating etc.
  • Gastrointestinal: feeding problems, diarrhea, vomiting
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7
Q

Fetal alcohol syndrome

A

Def.:
Affected development of the child after alcohol abuse during pregnancy of the mother.

  • underdeveloped brain
  • later cognitive functioning impairment
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8
Q

El Marroun er al. (2009) Study:

Brain development in substance use fetuses

A

Longitudinal cohort studies

  • generation R study
  • investigated THC levels in mothers

Prenatal cannabis use:

  1. Physiological:
    - saw fetal growth and head growth reduction in children after reduced cannabis exposure and constant exposure
    - there was no catchup growth of the fetus
  2. Psychological:
    - increased risk for externalizing problems
    - Aggressive behavior
    - impulsivity
    - attentional problems
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9
Q

Prevention of substance use during pregnancy

A

General:

  • tax policies
  • smoke free areas (public, work etc.)

Targeted:

  • general practitioners, gynecologists, and obstetricians
  • pregnancy logo on alcohol beverages
  • warnings packages towards offspring
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10
Q

Brain disease model of addiction

A

Simplified:
Imbalance between approach-oriented motivational system and regulatory control system

Brain networks:

  1. Salience network - mainly vACC and OFC
    - emotional regulation, salience attribution, and integration of affective information
  2. Reinforcement learning network - medial prefrontal cortex
    - associative learning from positive and negative behavioral outcomes
    - development of automatic/ habitual behavior
  3. Executive control network - prefrontal cortex areas, dACC, preSMA
    - cold processing of events with low emotional salience
    - attention, working memory, inhibition
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11
Q

Brain structures most sensitive to prenatal alcohol exposure

A

Corpus callosum:
- problems with retrieving information, problem solving, attention and verbal memory

Cerebellum:
-problems with controlling movement, maintaining balance, and fine motor skills

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12
Q

Why is the field of alcohol abuse in pregnancy so complex?

A

Confounding.

  • multiple substances used in combination
  • substance co-occurs with man other problems
  • timing of use and effects
  • postnatal factors, upbringing
  • genetic factors
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13
Q

Prevalence of adolescents binge drinking

A

44% of the 16 year olds binge drink (>5 glasses) monthly

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14
Q

Consequences of adolescence binge drinking

A
  • violence and risk behavior
  • physical harm and death, such as drowning, crashes, alcohol poisoning
  • addiction
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15
Q

Adolescence brain development

A
  • gray matter thins, white matter increases, connectivity improves
  • evolutionary older areas mature first (sensorimotor areas)
  • areas involved in more complex functions mature later
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16
Q

Why are adolescence at risk for substance use?

A

Hypersensitive salience network

Facilitates brain plasticity and learning flexibility

Suboptimal control in temping situations

Neurotoxicity during period of brain development

17
Q

Hypersensitive salience network

A

Adolescence marks surges in emotional and reward sensitivity, stimulating exploration and independence

Adolescents are known to get themselves involved in risky behavior

18
Q

Hypersensitivity to the social environment

A
  • Sensitivity to, complexity of, and reliance on peer relationships
  • Less involvements from parents
  • Paralleling improvements
  • the capacity to understand and care about other improves
  • more likely to take other individuals perspective into account
  • more sensitive to peer exclusion
  • more risk-taking in front of peers

UNCONSCIOUS SENSITIVITY TO PEERS

19
Q

Facilitated brain plasticity and learning flexibility

A

Addiction can be seen as extreme case of neuroplasticity.

The earlier the onset of addiction the worse the prognosis.

20
Q

Brain plasticity

A

Dynamic biological capacity of the brain changes in repose to the environment, supporting, brain maturation, as well as brain recovery after injury

  • involves modulation of neural connection
  • complex interaction between genes and environment
21
Q

Suboptimal control in tempting situation

A

Different sub-processes mature at different ages but stringed development before adolescence

  • poor cognitive control predicts substance use and problem in both adolescent and adults
  • poor cognitive control relegated to many disorders
22
Q

Neurotoxicity during period of brain development

A

Drug and alcohol use is related to change in brain volume of areas important for behavior control

  • related to poor cognitive performance
23
Q

Adolescence resilience to addiction

A

Hypersensitive to social environment:

SOCIAL DEVALUATION

  • Social devaluation of alcohol and drug use
  • transition to adult roles (finding a job, partner)
  • less cool to drink
  • less opportunities to go out
  • less cool to smell like drugs/alcohol
  • less cool to have a hangover or Tuesday dip