Overview & Risk Factors - Teen Temptations
- Substance Use Disorder (SUD): Pattern of substance use leading to impairment or distress.
- Common substances: Tobacco, alcohol, cannabis, opioids (e.g., heroin, cough syrups), inhalants (e.g., glue, whiteners).
- Adolescence: Critical period for initiation; brain still developing.
- Risk Factors:
- 📌 RISK Mnemonic:
- Relatives: Family history of SUD, parental substance use, permissive attitudes.
- Instability: Family conflict, poor parental monitoring, low socioeconomic status, abuse/neglect.
- School failure: Academic difficulties, truancy, disengagement.
- Kids using: Peer pressure, social normalization, desire for experimentation.
- Co-occurring psychiatric disorders (ADHD, depression, anxiety).
- Early trauma or significant stress.
- 📌 RISK Mnemonic:
⭐ Early age of initiation (typically <15 years) of substance use is a major predictor of developing severe SUD and other comorbidities.
Screening & Diagnosis - Spotting the Signs
- Universal Screening: Key for early identification in all adolescents.
- Screening Tools:
- 📌 CRAFFT: Car, Relax, Alone, Forget, Friends/Family, Trouble. Score ≥2 = Positive. Recommended for adolescents.
- ASSIST: WHO tool; screens multiple substances (alcohol, tobacco, illicit drugs).
- AUDIT-C: Alcohol specific (3 questions). Score ≥3 (Females), ≥4 (Males) = At-risk drinking.
- DAST-10: Drug Abuse Screening Test (10 items).
- Clinical Clues (Red Flags):
- Physical: Weight changes (↓/↑), poor hygiene, track marks, recurrent epistaxis.
- Behavioral: ↓ school performance, secretive behavior, new peer group, legal issues.
- Psychological: Mood swings, irritability, anxiety, depression, memory problems.
- Diagnosis: Based on DSM-5 criteria for Substance Use Disorder (SUD).
⭐ The CRAFFT questionnaire (Car, Relax, Alone, Forget, Family/Friends, Trouble) is a validated and widely recommended mnemonic-based screening tool for adolescent substance use; a score of ≥2 is positive.
Key Substances & Effects - Perilous Poisons
Commonly abused substances by adolescents include:
| Substance | Intoxication Highlights | Withdrawal Highlights |
|---|---|---|
| Alcohol | Slurred speech, ataxia, disinhibition, nystagmus | Tremors, anxiety, seizures, Delirium Tremens (DTs); CIWA-Ar scale |
| Opioids | Miosis, euphoria, $↓$resp rate, $↓$bowel sounds | Mydriasis, 📌 flu-like, yawning, piloerection, N/V, diarrhea; COWS scale |
| Cannabis | Conjunctival injection, $↑$appetite, euphoria, dry mouth | Irritability, anxiety, $↓$appetite, insomnia |
| Nicotine | Restlessness, N/V (high doses) | Craving, irritability, $↑$appetite, poor concentration |
| Inhalants | Euphoria, slurred speech, ataxia, perioral/nasal rash | Mild: irritability, sleep issues |

Management & Prevention - Guiding Recovery
- Goal: Abstinence or harm reduction, improved overall functioning.
- SBIRT Model: Screening, Brief Intervention, Referral to Treatment.
- Brief Interventions (BI):
- Utilize 📌 FRAMES model: Feedback, Responsibility, Advice, Menu of options, Empathy, Self-efficacy.
- Motivational Interviewing (MI):
-
⭐ Motivational Interviewing (MI) is a key evidence-based psychotherapeutic approach for adolescents with SUD, focusing on enhancing intrinsic motivation to change behavior.
-
- Psychosocial Therapies:
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), family-based therapies (e.g., MDFT), contingency management.
- Pharmacotherapy (Adjunctive & Cautious):
- Naltrexone (AUD, OUD); Buprenorphine (OUD - specialist care). Prioritize treating co-occurring psychiatric disorders.
- Prevention: Universal (e.g., school programs), Selective (for at-risk youth), Indicated (for those with early signs).
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- CRAFFT is the key screening tool for adolescent substance use.
- Alcohol, tobacco, cannabis are most common; inhalants in younger teens.
- High comorbidity with mental health disorders (e.g., depression, ADHD).
- Confidentiality is vital, but safety concerns (harm to self/others) are exceptions.
- Brief interventions & motivational interviewing are effective initial strategies.
- Early use of gateway drugs (alcohol, tobacco) ↑ risk of other illicit drugs.
- Family involvement is crucial for prevention and treatment success.
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