Addiction Medicine: Closing the Gap between Science and Practice

(lu) #1

substance use because of state laws that exclude
alcohol and other drug-related injuries from
medical insurance coverage.* 143


Risky alcohol use and addiction involving
alcohol are associated with neurological
problems including dementia, stroke and
neuropathy;^144 cardiovascular problems
including myocardial infarction,
cardiomyopathy, atrial fibrillation and
hypertension;^145 psychiatric problems including
depression, anxiety and suicide;^146 liver diseases
including hepatitis and cirrhosis;^147 and
gastrointestinal problems including pancreatitis
and gastritis.^148 Other associated conditions
include increased risk of cancer of the liver,
breast, mouth, throat, esophagus and colon,^149
and recent research suggests that risky alcohol
use may contribute to the physiological process
that causes cancer cells to metastasize.^150


Heavy alcohol use during pregnancy is
associated with miscarriage and stillbirth and is
one of the primary causes of severe mental and
developmental delays in infants.^151 Fetal alcohol
syndrome (FAS) is the leading known cause of
preventable mental retardation.^152


Illicit Drugs ..................................................................................................................


In 2008,† there were an estimated 16,044 deaths
attributed to the use of illicit drugs.^153 Of the
13,555 substance-related traffic fatalities in
2009, 5,938 involved drivers impaired either by
illicit drugs alone (3,146 deaths) or illicit drugs
in combination with alcohol (2,792 deaths).^154


In 2009, illicit drugs were involved in an
estimated 973,591 emergency department
visits;‡ accounting for 35.9 percent of substance-
related ED visits;^155 cocaine, marijuana and



  • In 25 states, Uniform Accident and Sickness Policy


Provision Laws (UPPL) exclude alcohol and other
drug-related injuries from medical insurance
coverage, creating a barrier to conducting screening
for risky substance use (see Chapters IV and X).
† Most recent available data that distinguishes


between illicit and controlled prescription drugs.
‡ Measured in terms of patient visits, not individual


drug reports.


heroin were the most frequently mentioned illicit
drugs.^156

Injection drug use behavior--including sharing
needles and other injection paraphernalia--is
associated with the spread of HIV/AIDS.^157 It is
estimated that more than one-third of all AIDS-
related deaths in the U.S. have occurred among
illicit drug users and their sexual partners.^158

Morbidity (secondary illness) and mortality
(death) data related to illicit drug use may
represent the direct pathological effects or
medical toxicities from the drug (e.g., cocaine
producing seizures or strokes or inhalants
producing cardiac arrhythmias that can lead to
sudden cardiac deaths), but also the infections
transmitted via drug self-administration (e.g.,
intravenous or intramuscular self-
administration).^159

Marijuana use is associated with sexually
transmitted disease due to unsafe sexual
behaviors engaged in while under the influence
of the drug, bronchitis and lung cancer; cocaine
use is associated with pancreatitis; heroin use is
associated with hepatitis and tuberculosis;
hallucinogen use is associated with tinnitus and
sexually transmitted disease; and inhalant use is
associated with HIV/AIDS, sexually transmitted
disease, tuberculosis, bronchitis, asthma,
sinusitis and tinnitus.§ 160

Illicit drug use also is linked to mental health
problems. Marijuana use is associated with the
onset of psychotic disorders, particularly in
individuals with an underlying vulnerability to
the illness;^161 several longitudinal studies have
linked marijuana use with the subsequent onset
of schizophrenia, and case studies have linked
synthetic cannabinoids with psychosis.^162
Marijuana and inhalant use are associated with

§ These health consequences are associated primarily
with long-term use of illicit drugs. The analyses
adjusted for potentially confounding factors such as
the duration of controlled prescription drug misuse,
alcohol use, tobacco use, daily cigarette smoking
history and demographic variables (age, gender,
race/ethnicity, educational attainment, health
insurance status and family income).
Free download pdf