Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10297995 | Comprehensive Psychiatry | 2005 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Assessments included the Structured Clinical Interview for Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition, Axis I Disorders, an interview exploring the spectrum of substance use (Structured Clinical Interview for the Spectrum of Substance Use), and a self-report instrument exploring the spectrum of 5 psychiatric disorders (General 5-Spectrum Measure). The overall frequency of substance use disorder (SUD) and that of subthreshold use were 46% and 8% in patients with bipolar disorder, 4% and 26% in those with panic disorder, 8% and 26% in those with obsessive-compulsive disorder, and 6% and 10% in the control group, respectively (Ï2 = 51.6, P < .001). Inspection of standardized residuals indicated that alcohol use disorder and SUD were significantly (P < .05) more frequent in subjects with bipolar disorder than among those with obsessive-compulsive disorder or panic disorder. The latter showed a significantly higher subthreshold use of substances than control subjects. The pattern of motivations for use varied according to the psychiatric disorder. Our results suggest that the well-established relationship between SUDs and psychiatric disorders might be the end point of a process that starts from increased proneness to substance use, which first leads to self-medication and then may eventually develop into substance abuse or dependence, among subjects with psychiatric symptoms.
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Authors
Alfredo Sbrana, Jacopo Vittoriano Bizzarri, Paola Rucci, Chiara Gonnelli, Maria Rosa Doria, Sabrina Spagnolli, Laura Ravani, Federica Raimondi, Lilliana Dell'Osso, Giovanni Battista Cassano,