June 23, 2008

Internet addiction a metal disorder

Filed under: internet, madness - alexei @ 3:52 am

According to a new study published in the American Journal of Psychiatry, internet addiction is a common disorder that should be included in Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders V (DSM-V). The disorder consists of excessive gaming, sexual preoccupations, excessive email/text messaging, and variants typically include 1) a loss of sense of time and neglect of basic drives, 2) internet withdrawal when a computer is not available, 3) a tolerance, which leads to a search for better equipment, faster connection, and more hours of use, and 4) negative repercussions, including lying, fatigue and social isolation. This comes after a series of studies published in South Korea, which had 10 cardiopulmonary deaths in internet cafes, as well as a game-related murder. According to government estimates from 2006, 210,000 South Korean children 6-19, 2,1% of the population are addicted and require treatment, with 80% deemed to need medication, and 20-24% requiring hospitalization. So if you spend more than 23 hours/week on the internets, you may have a problem. Seek help immediately! And I don’t mean on Google!!

Issues for DSM-V: Internet Addiction, PsychiatryOnline.org

May 3, 2007

Cannabis and schizophrenia

Filed under: weed, madness - alexei @ 12:03 am

The 2nd International Cannabis and Mental Health Conference was recently held in London (May 1-2) and has ignited much controversy about marijuana leading to psychotic symptoms and schizophrenia. But behind all the smoke, the broad claims and scary titles, many of the articles focus on only two studies: D’Souza’s on THC and schizophrenia and McGuire’s MRI scans of the brain. Without going into the details of their experiments, let’s just look at what they claim to have found.

These are the symptoms of schizophrenia discovered by Dr. Deepak Cyril D’Souza:

"Δ-9-THC produced schizophrenia-like positive and negative symptoms, altered perception, increased anxiety, produced euphoria, disrupted immediate and delayed word recall, impaired performance on tests of attention and working memory without impairing orientation."

What this looks like is a list of positive and negative symptoms of getting high. Altered perception can be said of many substances, without it having to be psychotic. Increased anxiety often comes with altered perception, since some people get worried when everything looks unfamiliar. It seems absurd to classify euphoria as a sign of madness. Meanwhile, impairment of attention and working memory comes hand in hand with most intoxicants, including alcohol. The study reports that these symptoms get more severe in people already diagnosed with schizophrenia, but if those are the symptoms being searched for, it seems essentially like saying that schizophrenic people get high too.

The results from Prof. Philip McGuire scans:

"THC attenuated [weakened] activation in the left temporal cortex compared to placebo… THC attenuated activation in the right inferior frontal cortex and its effect in this region predicted the severity of psychotic symptoms induced by THC. THC attenuated activation in the auditory cortex while subjects listened to speech."

Now, it’s well known that weed effects the auditory cortex, that’s why so many musicians smoke and so many smokers like to listen to music while high. The weakened auditory cortex while listening to speech is likely tied to the weakened left temporal cortex, which is responsible for sentence formation. Being high, similar to other types of intoxication, can make it hard to concentrate on long stories and sometimes you forget to finish your, what was I saying? The scan, in this case, backs up what could be easily hypothesized from the symptoms with a rudimentary knowledge of neurology. Meanwhile, the weakened activation of the right inferior frontal cortex, the region associated with face recognition, thus also with the ability to read emotions and acting appropriately in social situations, is just a part of a body of other visual hallucinations/attenuations, the most desired aspect for most users, and is what understandably accounts for the paranoia and general whackiness often experienced by smokers. Linking it with schizophrenia, which only recently has been connected to impaired face recognition, is tentative at best. So, much of the recent press on the matter seems to have blown a few carefully worded findings way out of proportion. Smoking weed does not make you schizophrenic, just because being high is kind of similar to it.

2nd International Cannabis and Mental Health Conference: Programme and Abstract book [pdf]

February 1, 2007

Charbonnier, psychiatric hospitals

Filed under: madness - alexei @ 3:06 am

Jean-Phillipe Charbonnier Psychiatric hospitals, Luminous-Lint.com

March 27, 2005

27% of US treated for mental problems/2 years

Filed under: psych, madness, brain - alexei @ 2:40 pm

A national survey of the general adult population and of adults who have needed or received some form of mental health treatment find that more than a quarter (27%) of all adults have received some form of mental health treatment over a two-year period.

Among those patients who have received treatment in the past two years:
1/3 (34%) received both therapy and drugs.
1/2 (47%) of patients used prescription drugs but did not receive therapy.
1/5 (19%) of patients received therapy but did not use prescription drugs.

A modest majority of those who received treatment were extremely (15%) or very (39%) satisfied with their care, with a much larger share (85%) at least somewhat satisfied. There was little difference in levels of satisfaction among patients who received drugs and therapy, therapy only, or drugs only.

Quarter of US Adults Have Received Mental Health Treatment Over Two-Year Period, MedicalNewsToday.com

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