Psychiatric comorbidity and additional abuse of drugs in maintenance treatment with l- and d,l-methadone.


Autoria(s): Wedekind D.; Jacobs S.; Karg I.; Luedecke C.; Schneider U.; Cimander K.; Baumann P.; Ruether E.; Poser W.; Havemann-Reinecke U.
Data(s)

2010

Resumo

Sixty d,l- or l-methadone treated patients in maintenance therapy were interviewed for additional drug abuse and psychiatric comorbidity; 51.7% of the entire population had a comorbid Axis-I disorder, with a higher prevalence in females (P=0.05). Comorbid patients tended to have higher abuse of benzodiazepines, alcohol, cannabis, and cocaine, but not of heroin. They had received a significantly lower d,l- (P<0.05) and l-methadone dose than non-comorbid subjects. The duration of maintenance treatment showed an inverse relationship to frequency of additional heroin intake (P<0.01). Patients with additional heroin intake over the past 30 days had been treated with a significantly lower l-methadone dosage (P<0.05) than patients without. Axis-I comorbidity appears to be decreased when relatively higher dosages of d,l- (and l-methadone) are administered; comorbid individuals, however, were on significantly lower dosages. Finally, l-, but not d,l-methadone seems to be more effective in reducing additional heroin abuse.

Identificador

https://serval.unil.ch/?id=serval:BIB_0871D0C2BA49

isbn:1814-1412[electronic], 1562-2975[linking]

pmid:20218800

doi:10.3109/15622970802176487

isiid:000284143000029

Idioma(s)

en

Fonte

World Journal of Biological Psychiatry, vol. 11, no. 2 Pt 2, pp. 390-399

Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/article

article