IntroductionPolydrug use is mostly common among adolescents and young adults, often with the intention of enhancing or counteracting the effects of another drug. It significantly increases the risks, due to drug synergy and increased side effects.ObjectivesWe investigated the prevalence of polydrug users in a population of Italian young adults using a specifically designed questionnaire.AimsWe aimed to assess the prevalence of polydrug abusers in a large sample of general population, and also to identify possible associations between alcohol misuse (e.g., binge drinking behaviours) and polydrug use.MethodsWe administered the questionnaire to a sample of 3000 subjects, aged 18 to 26, investigating socio-economic characteristics, alcohol abuse (with a specific focus on binge drinking) and use of psychoactive substances (cannabis, cocaine and Novel Psychoactive Substances-NPS). Collected data underwent statistical analyses.Results80.5% of the sample habitually consumed alcoholic beverages. Among alcohol consumers, 34.2% used cannabis, 5.4% cocaine, 3.7% NPS, and 79,2% had binge drinking behaviours. Among those who did not consume alcohol, 4% used cannabis, 0.4% used cocaine, and 0% used NPS. Polydrug use was more common among binge drinkers. 35.6% of cocaine abusers also used NPS, in comparison to 1.4% of non-abusers.ConclusionsAccording to scientific literature, alcohol and cocaine are the substances most commonly involved in risky polydrug use. Binge drinking and NPS appear to ben involved in polydrug use too. The combined effects of the different drugs need to be considered in identifying an appropriate and timely intervention strategy
We report a clinical case of a patient with a manic episode after taking methylphenidate (up to 120mgr per day) and cannabis in order to improve performance during exam period. He was hospitalized for disorganized behaviour, increased aggresion, delusions, grandiosity. He was affected by attention deficit and hyperactivity during childhood and recent episods of subthreshold depression. The therapy consisted of benzodiazepine and hydratation. In conclusion clinicians shuould ha ve caution in prescribing neurostimulant in vulnerable subjects.
In the last ten years it has sought a connection between the psychoanalysis and the neuroscience. The meeting point between these two branches is the neuropsychoanalysis [1]. METHODS A literature search was conducted on March 2014. PubMed and Scopus databases were used to find studies for inclusion in the systematic review. The keywords used for the literature search were: 'psychoanalysis", 'psychoanalytic psychotherapy", 'psychodynamic", 'psychodynamic psychotherapy", 'fmri", 'functional neuroimaging" and 'functional magnetic resonance". keywords were used together with the logical operator 'and". Only studies wich compared functional magnetic resonance imaging results before and after psychoanalytic psychotherapy in adult subjects were taken into account. Two (n=2) potentially relevant studies were obtained for the systematic review. SUMMARY As shown in the table, Buchheim et al. study results demostrate that the therapy hours modulated the attivaction of brain areas. After treatment, Fischmann et al. found a marked reduction in activation pattern. CONLCUSIONS The common results of the studies investigated in this systematic review is represented by a reduction, a modulation or a normalization of the activation areas before and after the psychoanalytic psychotherapy.
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