Sokolski K N, Cummings J L, Abrams B I, DeMet E M, Katz L S, Costa J F
Department of Psychiatry, Long Beach Veterans Affairs Medical Center, CA 90822.
J Clin Psychiatry. 1994 Sep;55(9):380-7.
Few data systematically document the effects of illicit drug exposure on psychotic illness. We examined the effect of substance abuse on rates and treatment responses of hallucinations in a chronic psychiatric population.
113 cooperative patients consecutively admitted to a state psychiatric hospital were administered the Structured Clinical Diagnostic Interview for DSM-III-R, a Hallucination Interview, and an inventory of past and current substances of abuse. Demographic information was obtained on 104 of 108 patients who declined interview. Medication dosage was analyzed for one third of the interviewed sample; hospital records, nursing reports, contacts with relatives, and urine drug screens were used to confirm information from patient interviews. Hallucination rates and response were compared by diagnostic groups (chi-square).
Noninterviewed patients had more frequent hospitalizations, more patients diagnosed with psychosis not otherwise specified or schizoaffective disorder, and fewer females with comorbid substance abuse than the study population. Among interviewed subjects, those with substance abuse and psychiatric illness had first admissions at an earlier age than patients with no substance abuse (p = .005). Schizophrenics experienced higher rates of visual (p = .04) and olfactory (p = .05) hallucinations when using illicit drugs. Substance abuse was associated with decreased treatment responsiveness of auditory (p < .03) and tactile (p < .004) hallucinations in schizophrenic or manic patients. Compared with nonparanoid patients, there was a trend for paranoid schizophrenics with substance abuse to experience more frequent visual (p = .09) and tactile (p = .06) and more refractory auditory (p = .08) hallucinations. No differences in medication dosages were found between patients with treatment-responsive and treatment-refractory hallucinations.
Abused substances may interact selectively with primary psychiatric illness to increase rates and treatment resistance of specific hallucination modalities; etiologies are discussed.
很少有数据系统地记录非法药物暴露对精神疾病的影响。我们研究了药物滥用对慢性精神病患者幻觉发生率及治疗反应的影响。
对连续入住一家州立精神病医院的113例合作患者进行了《精神疾病诊断与统计手册》第三版修订本的结构化临床诊断访谈、幻觉访谈以及过去和当前滥用药物清单。从108例拒绝访谈的患者中的104例获取了人口统计学信息。对三分之一的访谈样本分析了药物剂量;使用医院记录、护理报告、与亲属的联系以及尿液药物筛查来确认患者访谈中的信息。通过诊断组比较幻觉发生率和反应(卡方检验)。
未接受访谈的患者比研究人群住院更频繁,被诊断为未另行规定的精神病或精神分裂情感障碍的患者更多,合并药物滥用的女性患者更少。在接受访谈的受试者中,有药物滥用和精神疾病的患者首次入院年龄比无药物滥用的患者更早(p = 0.005)。精神分裂症患者在使用非法药物时出现视觉幻觉(p = 0.04)和嗅觉幻觉(p = 0.05)的发生率更高。药物滥用与精神分裂症或躁狂症患者听觉幻觉(p < 0.03)和触觉幻觉(p < 0.004)的治疗反应性降低有关。与非偏执型患者相比,有药物滥用的偏执型精神分裂症患者有出现更频繁的视觉幻觉(p = 0.09)和触觉幻觉(p = 0.06)以及更难治的听觉幻觉(p = 0.08)的趋势。治疗反应性幻觉和难治性幻觉患者之间未发现药物剂量差异。
滥用物质可能与原发性精神疾病发生选择性相互作用,从而增加特定幻觉类型的发生率和治疗抵抗性;对病因进行了讨论。