Treatments for Cocaine abuse
Treatments for Cocaine abuse
The list of treatments mentioned in various sources
for Cocaine abuse
includes the following list.
Always seek professional medical advice about any treatment
or change in treatment plans.
Cocaine abuse: Research Doctors & Specialists
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Hospital statistics for Cocaine abuse:
These medical statistics relate to hospitals, hospitalization and Cocaine abuse:
- 0.002% (276) of hospital consultant episodes were for mental and behavioural disorders due to use of cocaine in England 2002-03 (Hospital Episode Statistics, Department of Health, England, 2002-03)
- 91% of hospital consultant episodes for mental and behavioural disorders due to use of cocaine required hospital admission in England 2002-03 (Hospital Episode Statistics, Department of Health, England, 2002-03)
- 67% of hospital consultant episodes for mental and behavioural disorders due to use of cocaine were for men in England 2002-03 (Hospital Episode Statistics, Department of Health, England, 2002-03)
- 33% of hospital consultant episodes for mental and behavioural disorders due to use of cocaine were for women in England 2002-03 (Hospital Episode Statistics, Department of Health, England, 2002-03)
- more hospital information...»
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Hallucinations:
Treatment
(In a Page: Signs and Symptoms)
-
Treat hallucinations symptomatically with antipsychotic drugs (e.g., haloperidol, risperidone, olanzapine)
-
Delirium: Treat underlying cause (e.g., hydration, proper nutrition, oxygen, thiamine, and glucose)
-
Alcohol/sedative withdrawal: Monitor and treat for seizures with benzodiazepines
- Schizophrenia: Traditional antipsychotics (e.g., haloperidol, chlorpromazine)
–Extrapyramidal side effects (parkinsonism, akathisia, dystonia) are common
–Neuroleptic malignant syndrome (hyperthermia, rigidity, hypertension, tachycardia) may rarely occur in first week of treatment and can be fatal
–Clozapine carries a 1% risk of fatal agranulocytosis
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: In a Page: Signs and Symptoms, 2004
Hallucinations:
Treatment
(In A Page: Pediatric Signs and Symptoms)
-
Hallucinogens and other drugs of abuse
–May require intensive outpatient or inpatient management for successful cessation
–Cessation of the drug usually results in cessation of hallucination; however, for some hallucinogens such as LSD, flashbacks may occur for years
-
CNS insults generally require neurologic and multisystem intensive care
-
Schizophrenia is generally treated with antipsychotics; compliance is frequently problematic
-
Narcolepsy is treated with daytime stimulants and nighttime sleep aids or tricyclic antidepressants
-
Medications: Discontinue the causative drug
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Source: In A Page: Pediatric Signs and Symptoms, 2007
Substance abuse and induced disorders:
Treatment
(Professional Guide to Diseases (Eighth Edition))
The patient with acute drug intoxication should receive symptomatic treatment based on the drug ingested. Measures include fluid replacement therapy and nutritional and vitamin supplements, if indicated; detoxification with the same drug or a pharmacologically similar drug (exceptions include cocaine, hallucinogens, and marijuana, which aren’t used for detoxification); sedatives to induce sleep; anticholinergics and antidiarrheal agents to relieve GI distress; antianxiety drugs for severe agitation, especially in cocaine abusers; and symptomatic treatment of complications. Depending on the dosage and time elapsed before admission, additional treatment may include gastric lavage, induced emesis, activated charcoal, forced diuresis and, possibly, hemoperfusion or hemodialysis.
Treatment of drug dependence commonly involves a triad of care: detoxification, short- and long-term rehabilitation, and aftercare; the latter means a lifetime of abstinence, usually aided by participation in Narcotics Anonymous (NA) or a similar self-help group.
Detoxification, the controlled and gradual withdrawal of an abused drug, is achieved through substituting a drug with a similar action. Such gradual replacement of the abused drug controls the effects of withdrawal, thereby reducing the patient’s discomfort and associated risks.
Depending on which drug the patient has abused, detoxification may be managed on an inpatient or outpatient basis. For example, withdrawal from depressants can produce hazardous adverse reactions, such as generalized tonic-clonic seizures, status epilepticus, and hypotension. The severity of these reactions determines whether the patient can be safely treated as an outpatient or if he requires hospitalization. Withdrawal from depressants usually requires detoxification because abrupt or poorly managed withdrawal from barbiturates can cause death.
Opioid withdrawal causes severe physical discomfort and can be life threatening. To minimize these effects, chronic opioid abusers commonly are detoxified with methadone.
To ease withdrawal from opioids, depressants, and other drugs, useful nonchemical measures may include psychotherapy, exercise, relaxation techniques, and nutritional support. Sedatives and tranquilizers may be administered temporarily to help the patient cope with insomnia, anxiety, and depression.
After withdrawal, the patient needs to participate in a rehabilitation program to prevent a recurrence. Rehabilitation programs are available for inpatients and outpatients; they usually last a month or longer and may include individual, group, and family psychotherapy. During and after rehabilitation, participation in a drug-oriented self-help group may be helpful. The largest such group is NA.
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Source: Professional Guide to Diseases (Eighth Edition), 2005
Alcohol-related disorder:
Treatment
(Professional Guide to Diseases (Eighth Edition))
Total abstinence from alcohol is the only effective treatment. Supportive programs that offer detoxification, rehabilitation, and aftercare, including continued involvement in Alcoholics Anonymous (AA), may produce good long-term results.
Acute intoxication is treated symptomatically by supporting respiration, preventing aspiration of vomitus, replacing fluids, administering I.V. glucose to prevent hypoglycemia, correcting hypothermia or acidosis, and initiating emergency treatment for trauma, infection, or GI bleeding.
Treatment of chronic alcohol abuse requires a varied approach that may include medications to deter alcohol use and treat effects of withdrawal; psychotherapy, consisting of behavior modification techniques, group therapy, and family therapy; and appropriate measures to relieve associated physical problems.
Aversion, or deterrent, therapy involves a daily oral dose of disulfiram to prevent compulsive drinking. This drug interferes with alcohol metabolism and allows toxic levels of acetaldehyde to accumulate in the patient’s blood, producing immediate and potentially fatal distress in the event he consumes alcohol up to 2 weeks after taking it. Disulfiram is contraindicated during pregnancy and in the patient with diabetes, heart disease, severe hepatic disease, or any disorder in which such a reaction could be especially dangerous. Another form of aversion therapy attempts to induce aversion by administering alcohol with an emetic.
The first drug approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for the treatment of alcohol-related disorder since disulfiram is naltrexone, an opiate antagonist that effectively reduces the amount of intake, severity of craving, and relapse incidence. It’s believed to work by preventing the effects of increased endorphins produced as a product of increased alcohol intake.
For long-term success, the recovering individual must learn to fill the place alcohol once occupied in his life with something constructive. Therapy using disulfiram or naltrexone may only substitute one drug dependence for another, so it should be used prudently.
Benzodiazepine isn’t recommended during rehabilitation due to its addictive nature and the potential for reinforcing the substance abuse behavior.
ELDER TIP Because the older patient may be more sensitive to these drugs, withdrawal may take longer (weeks or months) and be more severe than in a younger adult.
Supportive counseling or individual, group, or family psychotherapy may help. Ongoing support groups are helpful. In AA, a self-help group with more than 1 million members worldwide, the alcoholic finds emotional support from others with similar problems. About 40% of AA’s members stay sober as long as 5 years, and 30% stay sober longer than 5 years.
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: Professional Guide to Diseases (Eighth Edition), 2005
Alcoholism:
Treatment
(Handbook of Diseases)
Total abstinence from alcohol is the only effective treatment. Supportive programs that offer detoxification, rehabilitation, and aftercare, including continued involvement in Alcoholics Anonymous, may produce good long-term results.
Acute intoxication is treated symptomatically by supporting respiration, preventing aspiration of vomitus, replacing fluids, administering I.V. glucose to prevent hypoglycemia, correcting hypothermia or acidosis, and initiating emergency treatment for trauma, infection, or GI bleeding. Acute withdrawal is also treated with oral multiple B vitamins, including thiamine. Administer fluids as needed, but avoid overhydrating the patient.
CLINICAL TIP: The possibility of intoxication with other drugs should be considered and a blood or urine sample sent for toxicology as appropriate.
Treatment of chronic alcoholism involves counseling, education, and cognitive techniques; psychotherapy (consisting of behavior modification techniques, group therapy, and family therapy); and appropriate measures to relieve associated physical problems.
Aversion, or deterrent, therapy may involve a daily oral dose of disulfiram to prevent compulsive drinking. (See Avoiding the risks of disulfiram therapy.)
UNDER STUDY: The opioid-antagonist drug naltrexone has been shown to reduce the ability to return to drinking and shorten periods of relapse. Longer-term trials are needed.
Tranquilizers, particularly the benzodiazepines, are used to decrease withdrawal symptoms of the central nervous system and are administered routinely to decrease risk of seizures. These drugs are administered and decreased over 3 to 5 days. Status epilepticus should be treated aggressively; initial treatment with lorazepam I.V. is effective.
Supportive counseling or individual, group, or family psychotherapy may help. Ongoing support groups are also helpful.
» READ BOOK EXCERPT ONLINE »
Source: Handbook of Diseases, 2003
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