29 resultados para corporeal substance


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Aims This paper presents the recommendations, developed from a 3-year consultation process, for a program of research to underpin the development of diagnostic concepts and criteria in the Substance Use Disorders section of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) and potentially the relevant section of the next revision of the International Classification of Diseases (ICD). Methods A preliminary list of research topics was developed at the DSM-V Launch Conference in 2004. This led to the presentation of articles on these topics at a specific Substance Use Disorders Conference in February 2005, at the end of which a preliminary list of research questions was developed. This was further refined through an iterative process involving conference participants over the following year. Results Research questions have been placed into four categories: (1) questions that could be addressed immediately through secondary analyses of existing data sets; (2) items likely to require position papers to propose criteria or more focused questions with a view to subsequent analyses of existing data sets; (3) issues that could be proposed for literature reviews, but with a lower probability that these might progress to a data analytic phase; and (4) suggestions or comments that might not require immediate action, but that could be considered by the DSM-V and ICD 11 revision committees as part of their deliberations. Conclusions A broadly based research agenda for the development of diagnostic concepts and criteria for substance use disorders is presented.

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Aims paper describes the background to the establishment of the Substance Use Disorders Workgroup, which was charged with developing the research agenda for the development of the next edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM). It summarizes 18 articles that were commissioned to inform that process. Methods A preliminary list of research topics, developed at the DSM-V Launch Conference in 2004, led to the identification of subjects that were subject to formal presentations and detailed discussion at the Substance Use Disorders Conference in February 2005. Results The 18 articles presented in this supplement examine: (1) categorical versus dimensional diagnoses; (2) the neurobiological basis of substance use disorders; (3) social and cultural perspectives; (4) the crosswalk between DSM-IV and the International Classification of Diseases Tenth Revision (ICD-10); (5) comorbidity of substance use disorders and mental health disorders; (6) subtypes of disorders; (7) issues in adolescence; (8) substance-specific criteria; (9) the place of non-substance addictive disorders; and (10) the available research resources. Conclusions In the final paper a broadly based research agenda for the development of diagnostic concepts and criteria for substance use disorders is presented.

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Background: Study of the course of substance misuse and daily tobacco use in first-episode psychosis may enhance detection and treatment of these substance-related problems. Methods: This 15-month follow-up study examined the course of substance misuse and daily tobacco use in 103 individuals treated for first-episode psychosis. Results: Three-quarters (72.6%) of patients with lifetime substance misuse, or half (51.5%) of all patients, continued substance misuse (primarily cannabis) during the 15-month follow-up period. There was a significant reduction in the rate of any substance misuse (70.9% versus 53.4%) but not daily tobacco use (76.7% versus 75.7%) between baseline and 15-month follow-up. Patients who continued substance misuse showed a significant reduction in the severity and frequency of substance use between baseline and follow-up. Patients who continued substance misuse were more likely to be younger, male and single, less likely to have completed secondary school, and more likely to have had more severe cannabis use prior to entry to treatment compared to patients who ceased substance misuse. Discussion: A significant proportion of young patients treated for first-episode psychosis are at risk of mental and physical health problems associated with substance misuse and/or regular tobacco use. (c) 2005 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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Background Well-designed prospective studies of substance misuse in first-episode psychosis can improve our understanding of the risks associated with comorbid substance misuse and psychosis. Aims To examine the potential effects of substance misuse on in-patient admission and remission and relapse of positive symptoms in first-episode psychosis. Method The study was a prospective 15-month follow-up investigation of 103 patients with first-episode psychosis recruited from three mental health services. Results Substance misuse was independently associated with increased risk of in-patient admission, relapse of positive symptoms and shorter time to relapse of positive symptoms after controlling for potential confounding factors, Substance misuse was not associated with remission or time to remission of positive symptoms. Heavy substance misuse was associated with increased risk of in-patient admission, relapse and shorter time to relapse. Conclusions Substance misuse is an independent risk factor for a problematic recovery from first-episode psychosis.

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The effects of substance P (SP) on nicotinic acetylcholine (ACh)-evoked currents were investigated in parasympathetic neurons dissociated from neonatal rat intracardiac ganglia using standard whole cell, perforated patch, and outside-out recording configurations of the patch-clamp technique. Focal application of SP onto the soma reversibly decreased the peak amplitude of the ACh-evoked current with half-maximal inhibition occurring at 45 mu M and complete block at 300 mu M SP. Whole cell current-voltage (I-V) relationships obtained in the absence and presence of SP indicate that the block of ACh-evoked currents by SP is voltage independent. The rate of decay of ACh-evoked currents was increased sixfold in the presence of SP (100 mu M), suggesting that SP may increase the rate of receptor desensitization. SP-induced inhibition of ACh-evoked currents was observed following cell dialysis and in the presence of either 1 mM 8-Br-cAMP, a membrane-permeant cAMP analogue, 5 mu M H-7, a protein kinase C inhibitor, or 2 mM intracellular AMP-PNP, a nonhydrolyzable ATP analogue. These data suggest that a diffusible cytosolic second messenger is unlikely to mediate SP inhibition of neuronal nicotinic ACh receptor (nAChR) channels. Activation of nAChR channels in outside-out membrane patches by either ACh (3 mu M) or cytisine (3 mu M) indicates the presence of at least three distinct conductances (20, 35, and 47 pS) in rat intracardiac neurons. In the presence of 3 mu M SP, the large conductance nAChR channels are preferentially inhibited. The open probabilities of the large conductance classes activated by either ACh or cytisine were reversibly decreased by 10- to 30-fold in the presence of SP. The single-channel conductances were unchanged, and mean apparent channel open times for the large conductance nAChR channels only were slightly decreased by SP. Given that individual parasympathetic neurons of rat intracardiac ganglia express a heterogeneous population of nAChR subunits represented by the different conductance levels, SP appears to preferentially inhibit those combinations of nAChR subunits that form the large conductance nAChR channels. Since ACh is the principal neurotransmitter of extrinsic (vagal) innervation of the mammalian heart, SP may play an important role in modulating autonomic control of the heart.

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