 |
 |

The Collaborative Neuropsychological Study of Polydrug Users
Igor Grant, MD;
Kenneth M. Adams, PhD;
Albert S. Carlin, PhD;
Phillip M. Rennick, PhD;
Lewis L. Judd, MD;
Kenneth Schooff, MD
Arch Gen Psychiatry. 1978;35(9):1063-1074.
Abstract
 |  |
A controlled three-month prospective collaborative investigation involving eight National Institute on Drug Abusesupported polydrug units was carried out. Clinical review of test protocols assessed 37% of polydrug users, 26% of psychiatric patients, and 8% of nonpatients as impaired on the Halstead-Reitan Battery. Impairment in test performance was related to increasing age, educational deprivation, and premorbid medical factors in all groups, extensive use of CNS depressants and opiates among polydrug users, and extensive use of antipsychotic drugs in psychiatric patients. Both language-related and perceptuomotor neuropsychological test deficits were found in polydrug users, but only the latter in psychiatric patients. At three-month follow-up 34% of polydrug users, 27% of psychiatric patients, and 4% of nonpatients were impaired in these test performances. Recent drug-taking (polydrug group) and schizophrenia diagnosis (psychiatric patients) were additional correlates of test impairment. Persistence of performance deficit in polydrug users raises the possibility that CNS depressants and opiates may have longer-term, slowly reversible, or even permanent effects on neuropsychological tests. The same possibility exists for antipsychotic drugs. The link of these test deficits to other specific neuropsychological functions, to performance in life situations generally, or to specific brain dysfunction, as well as the basis for a lack of test impairments in the majority of polydrug subjects remain to be determined.
Author Affiliations
From the Department of Psychiatry, University of California, San Diego, and the Psychiatry Service, Veterans Administration Hospital, La Jolla, Calif (Drs Grant and Judd); the Department of Psychiatry, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario (Dr Adams); the Department of Psychiatry, University of Washington, Seattle (Dr Carlin); the Department of Psychology, Lafayette Clinic, Detroit (Drs Rennick and Schooff); and the Department of Psychiatry, Wayne State University, Detroit (Dr Schooff). Dr Adams is now with the Department of Psychiatry, Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit.
Footnotes
Accepted for publication Jan 10, 1978.
Deceased.
Reprint requests to Department of Psychiatry, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, CA 92093 (Dr Grant).
CiteULike Connotea Del.icio.us Digg Reddit Technorati Twitter
What's this?
THIS ARTICLE HAS BEEN CITED BY OTHER ARTICLES
Reorganization of the composition of brain oscillations and their temporal characteristics during opioid withdrawal
Fingelkurts et al.
J Psychopharmacol 2008;22:270-284.
ABSTRACT
Neuropsychological Function, Drug Abuse, and Violence: A Conceptual Framework
FISHBEIN
Criminal Justice and Behavior 2000;27:139-159.
ABSTRACT
Reduced Mortality Risk in Alcoholics Who Achieve Long-term Abstinence
Bullock et al.
JAMA 1992;267:668-672.
ABSTRACT
Neurologic Disease in Human Immunodeficiency Virus-Infected Drug Abusers
Malouf et al.
Arch Neurol 1990;47:1002-1007.
ABSTRACT
Aging, Abstinence, and Medical Risk Factors in the Prediction of Neuropsychologic Deficit Among Long-term Alcoholics
Grant et al.
Arch Gen Psychiatry 1984;41:710-718.
ABSTRACT
|