Alcohol & Substance Abuse

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Last updated 12:07 AM on 4/10/26
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48 Terms

1
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What are the symptoms seen in a person going through an opioid OD?

Sedation (“nodding”), respiratory depression, pinpoint pupils, blue lips and nails

2
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The routes of administration for naloxone for opioid OD are via _____ and _____.

Intranasal, IM

3
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MOA of naloxone?

instantly reverses opioid overdoses by blocking the opioids from interacting with the mu receptors

4
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If there is no response to Narcan in _____ minutes, you can administer another dose. It wears off in 30-90 minutes.

3

5
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If there is no response to Narcan in THREE minutes, you can administer another dose. It wears off in _____ minutes.

30-90

6
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Do we need a prescription for naloxone (Narcan)?

No

7
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List the FDA-approved treatments for opioids dependence and its MOA.

Naltrexone: opioid antagonist

Methadone: opioid agonist (helps with withdrawal symptoms, can be abused, ADR QT prolongation)

Suboxone: buprenorphine + naloxone (sublingual). Buprenorphine is a partial agonist and antagonist, naloxone is an antagonist. Naloxone is not absorbed well sublingually. If the patient tries to abuse it by crushing it for IV, the naloxone will act as an antagonist to block the buprenorphine.

Subutex: buprenorphine without naloxone

8
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Name the antidepressant FDA-approved for smoking cessation.

Bupropion (wellbutrin)

9
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Name the drug of abuse that can be “cooked” from OTC pseudoephedrine (Sudafed). 

Methamphetamine

10
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What is considered “legally drunk” DUI blood alcohol concentration (BAC) in California?

0.08%- regular drivers

0.04%-commercial license drivers

11
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List the treatments for alcohol w/d (inpatient) and rationale for their use.

BZDs: preferred treatment for withdrawal symptoms with cross-tolerance with alcohol through modulation of GABA receptors. Most commonly used are BZDs with longer half-life: chlordiazepoxide (Librium), diazepam (Valium). Lorazepam (Ativan) is for patients with liver impairment.

In situations of severe withdrawal sxs, large doses of BZDs can be required, and phenobarbital can be used in these cases.

Adjunct treatment with clonidine is sometimes used for hypertension and to calm the sympathetic nervous system.

Thiamine (B1) 100 mg is given to avoid Wernicke Korsakoff syndrome.

A banana bag has IV fluids containing vitamins and minerals. The bags typically contain MVI, thiamine (B1), folic acid (B9), and magnesium sulfate, usually used to correct nutritional deficiencies or chemical imbalances in the body.

12
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Wernicke Korsakoff syndrome is secondary to chronic alcohol abuse, is due to which vitamin deficiency? Prevention consists of supplementation of the depleted vitamin at what daily dose for about how long (days/weeks/months/years)? Brain fog

B1 (Thiamine)

100 mg

Months

Alcohol abuse decreases vitamin B1 (thiamine), which results in Wernicke Korsakoff syndrome. Wernicke encephalopathy has a sxs of confusion, ataxia, nystagmus; if untreated, can lead to Korsakoff psychosis characterized by memory loss, confabulation, and occasionally hallucinations (visual).

13
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Disulfiram MOA

Inhibits aldehyde dehydrogenase → accumulation of acetaldehyde → deters alcohol use

14
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Naltrexone PO (Revia) MOA

Blocks μ receptor → decreases rewarding effects of alcohol use → reduce cravings

15
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Naltrexone IM (Vivitrol) MOA

Blocks μ receptor → decreases rewarding effects of alcohol use → reduce cravings

16
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Acamprosate (Campral) MOA

blocks NMDA receptors → restoring GABA and glutamate balance

17
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What is the most beneficial therapy for alcohol use disorder to attain long-term sobriety?

Alcoholics Anonymous (AA)

18
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What is the MOA of flushing in some Asians after intake of alcohol AKA “Asian Flush”?  Describe the Antabuse reaction.

Many Asian populations (30-50%) lack aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH) (acetaldehyde metabolizer). Acetaldehyde cannot be converted to acetate by aldehyde dehydrogenase.

Disulfiram blocks aldehyde dehydrogenase causing drinkers to experience a similar unpleasant sensation when they drink.

19
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How does Pepcid help with people with aldehyde dehydrogenase deficiency?

Alcohol increases histamine levels. Pepcid slows the breakdown of ethanol to acetaldehyde

20
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Which of the following are dissociative psychedelics drugs? (Dissociation from environment or self in a dream-like state or trance)

All of the above

21
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Chronic alcohol abuse can induce CYP2E1 enzyme. What is the effect the metabolism of acetaminophen?

APAP with the toxic metabolite of NAPQI can be damaging to the liver if used more than 4 grams a day

If the pt has been drinking alcohol the max dose should NOT be > 2 gm/day (increased risk of hepatotoxicity). Chronic alcohol use induces the CYP2E1 enzyme that converts acetaminophen to the NAPQI

22
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Your patient is taking Percocet 2T q6hr after surgery. In addition, she takes Tylenol extra strength 2T q 12 hr for pain relief for over 6 months. Any issue in this case?

Percocet 2TQ6 hr = APAP 2.6/day + 2 gm OTC = 4.6 gm/day

Don’t take additional tylenol

23
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Is naloxone effective in treating other types of overdoses other than opioids?

No

24
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Can pregnant patients with opioid OD be given naloxone?

Yes

25
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Which medication is FDA-approved for AUD and OUD?

Naltrexone (Revia)

26
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What is Vivitrol and its indication?

Naltrexone monthly IM injection for opioid & alcohol use disorders

Only used in overdose

27
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What is the difference between Suboxone and Subutex? Why is naloxone added in Suboxone?

Both have buprenorphine.

Subutex has buprenorphine and naloxone

28
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What are the FDA-approved treatments for OUD?

Buprenorphine (Suboxone), Methadone (Dolophine), Naltrexone (Revia), Naloxone (Narcan)

29
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What is the street name for MDMA (3,4-methylenedioxy-methamphetamine)? 

Ecstasy, 5-HT and oxytocin

30
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What neurotransmitters imbalance causes alcohol withdrawal symptoms?

Glutamate and GABA

31
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What are the symptoms of alcohol w/d (AIMS)?

Anxiety, Insomnia, Muscle tremor, Seizures, Increase BP

32
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The most commonly used benzodiazepines with longer half-lives are ________ and ________. Use ________ for patients with liver impairment

chlordiazepoxide (Librium), Diazepam (Valium), Ativan (Lorazepam)

33
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______ syndrome can be seen in babies with mothers with alcohol use disorder.

Fetal alcohol

34
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What are sxs of FAS?

Small hand, thin upper lip, smooth ridge between upper lip and nose, seizure, delayed speech, cognitive issues.

35
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Which OTC drug is abused in supratherapeutic doses to act on the mu opioid receptors (AKA poor man’s methadone)?

Loperamide

36
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What is Kratom? Is this abused? MOA?

Mu antagonist, used in Asia for Pain

37
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Delirium tremens usually peaks around day 5 after alcohol cessation. What are the usual treatments for DTs?

2-3 days after alcohol. Peak at day 5, lasts up to 7 days

Symptoms: agitation, disorientation, tachycardia, HTN, fever, diaphoresis, tremor

Banana bag: Folic acid, thiamine, multivitamins, magnesium

38
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What is in a banana bag?

Folic acid, thiamine, multivitamins, magnesium

39
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Substance abuse frequently coexists with and complicates other psychiatric disorders, and it is a common and often unrecognized cause of physical morbidity. Intravenous drug abuse is a major factor in the spread of _______ and ______.

HIV, Hepatitis C

40
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What are the most abused drinks in college students?

Alcohol

41
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Which of the following is a rescue drug for opioid OD?

Buprenorphine (Suboxone), Methadone (Dolophine), Naloxone (Narcan)

42
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Naltrexone is FDA-approved for which disorders?

AUD & OUD

43
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Your patient is doing well on naltrexone but often misses their daily doses. What can you recommend?

Vivitrol (naltrexone) IM injection monthly

44
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What is the most common ADR for Campral (acamprosate) for the treatment of AUD? Management?

Explosive Diarrhea: Use lower therapeutic doses (333mg 2T po TID to 1T po TID)

45
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Which class of medications contributes to the most fatalities with OD? Name the drug with most OD death.

Synthetic opioids if not opioids

46
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The most likely cause of opioid OD fatalities is from______

Respiratory depression

47
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Higher risk of respiratory depression from opioid OD is higher with concurrent use of what other meds?

BZDs (alprazolam, diazepam, etc), Gabapentin

48
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Explain why it takes approximately 3 weeks for Valium (diazepam) to be cleared from the body?

Valium is a long acting benzo