Pubdate: Sat, 07 Feb 2009 Source: Montreal Gazette (CN QU) Copyright: 2009 Canwest Publishing Inc. Contact: http://www.canada.com/montrealgazette/letters.html Website: http://www.canada.com/montrealgazette/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/274 Author: Charlie Fidelman Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?252 (Cannabis - Psychosis) MENTALLY ILL ALSO PLAGUED BY ADDICTION, EXPERTS FIND High Incidence. Drug Use Complicates Psychiatric Treatment, Conference Told The mix of mental illness and drug addiction is an explosive cocktail, Mont-real researchers said yesterday. An estimated 33 to 50 per cent patients treated for serious psychiatric disorders also suffer from drug and alcohol addiction problems, Universite de Montreal researcher Stephane Potvin said at a conference at Louis-H. Lafontaine Hospital. Research shows that the mentally ill become dependent more quickly and they tend to abuse drugs more easily, Potvin said after presented his findings at the three-day conference. "Also, drug use can worsen the symptoms of mental disease," he added. The impact of narcotics is greater particularly on people with schizophrenic disorders, Potvin said, where drug addiction is estimated at more than 50 per cent. "That situation is alarming because we know that drug use could trigger brain deterioration in these people," said Potvin, whose study showed a shrinking of the brain's "pleasure centre" in schizophrenic people who used drugs but not with those who did not consume. The brain anomaly may explain why schizophrenics have a greater sensitivity to drugs, or may be proof of the reverse, which is that drug consumption changes brain structures, he said. The relationship between drug abuse and schizophrenia is not clear, Potvin said. But drug use is known to be a risk factor for those suffering from schizophrenia. "Not everyone who smokes a joint will become schizophrenic. Many people smoke pot without suffering psychosis," Potvin said. "But a schizophrenic who has one joint or even one puff, that's enough to send them to the ER." Chronic drug abuse by adolescents contributes to the development of mental illness, he said. According to earlier studies on marijuana, those most at risk for mental illness triggered or aggravated by drug use had started young and smoked heavily, and also had vulnerable personality traits and a close family member with schizophrenia. Researchers are calling for integrated treatment that can effectively deal with co-occurring disorders. Patients are often shunted between mental health professional and detox facilities, because neither is fully equipped to deal with patients who have a dual diagnosis, said psychiatrist Patrick Barabe, director of the conference science committee. Substance abuse complicates just about every aspect of care, Barabe said. Often these patients cannot attend community residences that provide rehabilitation programs. For a few severe cases, the Clinique Cormier-Lafontaine offers integrated therapy, Barabe said. "But much more is needed. We can't handle everyone." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom