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Drug Abuse and Dependence

Drug Abuse and Dependence

Drug Abuse and Dependence

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Definitions & Neurobiology - Brain's Tricky Treat

  • Substance Use Disorder: Problematic pattern of substance use leading to clinically significant impairment or distress (DSM-5/ICD-11 classification replacing "drug abuse" and "dependence").
    • Psychological: Craving, emotional reliance.
    • Physical: Bodily adaptation; withdrawal on stopping.
  • Tolerance: ↓ drug effect; ↑ dose for same effect. Types: metabolic, cellular.
  • Withdrawal: Symptoms on drug cessation/reduction.
  • Addiction: Chronic, relapsing disorder; compulsive drug use.
  • Neurobiological Pathways: Complex interplay involving mesolimbic pathway (VTA → NAc → PFC), extended amygdala (stress/negative states), prefrontal cortex (executive function), and glutamatergic systems (learning/memory). Dopamine (DA) release reinforces drug use.

Neurochemical neurocircuits in drug reward

⭐ Psychological dependence: craving (Dopamine in Nucleus Accumbens). Physical dependence: neuroadaptation (e.g., altered receptors), causing withdrawal.

ClassE.g.MoAIntoxication SxWithdrawal Sx
OpioidsHeroin, MorphineMu-agonist📌CRUSH (Coma, Resp↓, Pinpoint pupils), SBP↓Flu-like, mydriasis, piloerection
CNS DepressantsBarbs, BZDsGABA$_A$ ↑Drowsiness, ataxia, slurred speech, resp↓Anxiety, seizures (life-threatening)
CNS StimulantsCocaine, Amphs↑DA/NE/5-HTAgitation, HTN, ↑HR, mydriasis; Psychosis (Amph), Formication (Cocaine)"Crash": dysphoria, fatigue
HallucinogensLSD, PCPLSD: 5-HT$_{2A}$ ↑; PCP: NMDA↓LSD: Perceptual Δs; PCP: aggression, nystagmusLSD: Flashbacks. PCP: Anxiety.
CannabisTHCCB1/CB2 agonistEuphoria, ↑appetite, red eyes, impaired coordinationIrritability, anxiety, insomnia
InhalantsSolvents, NitritesCNS depressantEuphoria, dizziness, slurred speech; "sudden sniffing death"Mild; irritability, nausea

💡 Clinical Pearl: Under BNS Sec 328, voluntary consumption of narcotic drugs is distinguished from involuntary poisoning through BNSS Sec 176 procedures requiring comprehensive toxicological examination and BSA-compliant evidence documentation using DSM-5-TR criteria and transitioning ICD-11 classification standards.

Toxidromes & Management - Antidote Avengers

ToxidromeSigns (Pupils, Skin, Vitals)DrugsAntidote & Dose(s)
OpioidPinpoint pupils, ↓RR, altered mental statusHeroinNaloxone 0.4-2mg IV (titrate based on response).
SympathomimeticMydriasis, ↑HR/BP/Temp, sweat, agitationCocaineBZDs (Diazepam 5-10mg IV).
Sedative-HypnoticVariable pupils, ↓RR, somnolence/comaBZDs, BarbsFlumazenil 0.2mg IV (BZD). Supportive.
CholinergicMiosis, SLUDGE, bradycardia, bronchorrheaOPs, CarbamatesAtropine 2-5mg IV. Pralidoxime 500mg IV + 10mg/kg/hr infusion.
AnticholinergicMydriasis, dry/hot skin, ↑Temp, deliriumAtropine, TCAsPhysostigmine 0.5-2mg IV. 📌 "Blind as a bat..."
ParacetamolHepatotoxicityParacetamolNAC 150mg/kg IV load.
Methanol/EGAGMA, visual/renalMethanol, EGFomepizole 15mg/kg IV load / Ethanol.
%%{init: {'flowchart': {'htmlLabels': true}}}%%
flowchart TD

A["⚠️ Suspected Overdose
• Patient intake• Acute poisoning"]

B["📋 Clinical Assessment
• Monitor vitals• Physical exam"]

C["🩺 Toxidrome Identification
• Recognize signs• Define syndrome"]

D["⚖️ BNS Sec 284
• Poisoning cases• Legal compliance"]

E["🔬 BNSS Sec 174
• Medical exam• Forensic check"]

F["🧪 BSA Evidence
• Collection step• Sample custody"]

G["💊 Antidote Admin
• Give treatment• Patient recovery"]

A --> B B --> C C --> D D --> E E --> F F --> G

style A fill:#FDF4F3, stroke:#FCE6E4, stroke-width:1.5px, rx:12, ry:12, color:#B91C1C style B fill:#FEF8EC, stroke:#FBECCA, stroke-width:1.5px, rx:12, ry:12, color:#854D0E style C fill:#F7F5FD, stroke:#F0EDFA, stroke-width:1.5px, rx:12, ry:12, color:#6B21A8 style D fill:#F6F5F5, stroke:#E7E6E6, stroke-width:1.5px, rx:12, ry:12, color:#525252 style E fill:#FFF7ED, stroke:#FFEED5, stroke-width:1.5px, rx:12, ry:12, color:#C2410C style F fill:#FFF7ED, stroke:#FFEED5, stroke-width:1.5px, rx:12, ry:12, color:#C2410C style G fill:#F1FCF5, stroke:#BEF4D8, stroke-width:1.5px, rx:12, ry:12, color:#166534


> ⭐ Flumazenil: risk of seizures in chronic BZD users or TCA overdose.

## Forensic Toxicology & Law - Law & Lab Logic

*   **NDPS Act, 1985**: Governs drugs with significant amendments including the Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances (Amendment) Bill, 2021. Defines: Cannabis, Opium, Psychotropics. **Small vs. Commercial quantity** distinctions refined with evolving penalties for possession/trafficking.
*   **Medico-legal Samples**: Blood (**2-10ml** + NaF for alcohol), Urine (**30-50ml** based on analysis type), Vitreous, Hair, Saliva. Volume requirements vary by suspected substance and laboratory protocols. Label meticulously.
*   **Chain of Custody**: Unbroken record of sample handling under **BSA** evidence requirements. Ensures integrity, legal admissibility.
*   **Drug Testing**: Screening (Immunoassays - presumptive, potential cross-reactivity) vs. **Mandatory** Confirmatory (GC-MS, LC-MS, HRMS - definitive). Both steps essential for robust analysis.



```mermaid
%%{init: {'flowchart': {'htmlLabels': true}}}%%
flowchart TD

Start["<b>🧪 Sample Intake</b><br><span style='display:block; text-align:left; color:#555'>• Collect drug sample</span><span style='display:block; text-align:left; color:#555'>• Forensic handling</span>"]

Chain["<b>📋 Evidence Chain</b><br><span style='display:block; text-align:left; color:#555'>• BSA tracking</span><span style='display:block; text-align:left; color:#555'>• Maintain custody</span>"]

Screen["<b>🔬 Screening Test</b><br><span style='display:block; text-align:left; color:#555'>• Initial immunoassay</span><span style='display:block; text-align:left; color:#555'>• Rapid detection</span>"]

Confirm["<b>🔬 Gold Standard</b><br><span style='display:block; text-align:left; color:#555'>• GC-MS/LC-MS check</span><span style='display:block; text-align:left; color:#555'>• Confirm results</span>"]

Legal["<b>⚖️ Compliance</b><br><span style='display:block; text-align:left; color:#555'>• NDPS Act 2024</span><span style='display:block; text-align:left; color:#555'>• Legal standards</span>"]

Start --> Chain
Chain --> Screen
Screen --> Confirm
Confirm --> Legal

style Start fill:#EEFAFF, stroke:#DAF3FF, stroke-width:1.5px, rx:12, ry:12, color:#0369A1
style Chain fill:#FEF8EC, stroke:#FBECCA, stroke-width:1.5px, rx:12, ry:12, color:#854D0E
style Screen fill:#FFF7ED, stroke:#FFEED5, stroke-width:1.5px, rx:12, ry:12, color:#C2410C
style Confirm fill:#FFF7ED, stroke:#FFEED5, stroke-width:1.5px, rx:12, ry:12, color:#C2410C
style Legal fill:#F6F5F5, stroke:#E7E6E6, stroke-width:1.5px, rx:12, ry:12, color:#525252

⭐ Detecting a drug metabolite (e.g., benzoylecgonine for cocaine) in urine, not just the parent drug, strongly indicates recent drug administration and metabolism by the body.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Drug abuse is non-medical use; dependence includes tolerance and withdrawal symptoms.
  • Opioids (heroin): pinpoint pupils, respiratory depression. Antidote: Naloxone.
  • Cocaine: mydriasis, tachycardia, seizures. Crack cocaine is highly potent.
  • Cannabis (THC): conjunctival congestion, impaired coordination, dry mouth.
  • Amphetamines: CNS stimulants causing psychosis, hyperthermia, cardiac issues.
  • Barbiturates: CNS depressants, respiratory failure, no specific antidote.
  • Benzodiazepines: Safer CNS depressants. Antidote: Flumazenil.

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