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European Addiction Research

ISSN 1022-6877

5 papers in the library · 278 citations · publishing 1998-2024

Papers

5-Year Trends in Use of Hallucinogens and Other Adjunct Drugs among UK Dance Drug Users

European Addiction Research December 18, 2006 Jim Mccambridge, Adam Winstock, Neil Hunt et al. 113 citations

From 1999 to 2003, a survey of people who use drugs in dance contexts found rising lifetime and current use of psilocybin, ketamine, GHB, and nitrates. Current psilocybin use increased sharply in 2002–2003, while ketamine use rose more gradually throughout the period. LSD use declined, mirroring trends in general population surveys. These increases among dance drug users may signal wider prevalence increases among young people, warranting careful study and development of effective interventions.

Is the Use of Ecstasy and Hallucinogens Increasing?

European Addiction Research January 1, 1998 Peter Schuster, Roselind Lieb, Christina Maria Lamertz et al. 96 citations

A community survey of 3,021 adolescents and young adults aged 14–24 in Munich, Germany, found that in 1995, 4% of males and 2.3% of females reported using ecstasy, while hallucinogen use was reported by 3% of males and about 2% of females. Compared to a 1990 survey, consumption of both substance types had at least doubled. About two-thirds of lifetime users were regular users. The prevalence of DSM-IV abuse and dependence on ecstasy and related substances was about 1%, identical to rates for hallucinogens, indicating significant dependence potential. The increase was strongest in younger age groups, with a notable rise among women.

Use of MDMA and Other Illicit Drugs by Young Adult Males in Northern Spain

European Addiction Research January 1, 2002 Julio Bobes, Pilar A. Sáiz, María Paz García‐portilla et al. 34 citations

Among young men entering compulsory military service in Asturias, Spain, between 1995 and 1999, lifetime use of MDMA was 10.9%, past-year use 7.8%, and past-month use 4.5%, ranking fifth among illicit drugs ever tried. Once MDMA was used, reuse was common: 71% of ever-users had used it in the past year, and 41% in the past month. MDMA users had more extensive drug histories than non-users. Those who used MDMA in the past year scored higher on Neuroticism and Psychoticism subscales of the Eysenck Personality Questionnaire-A and reported greater sensation seeking.

Screened Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder as a Predictor of Substance Use Initiation and Escalation in Early Adulthood and the Role of Self-Reported Conduct Disorder and Sensation Seeking: A 5-Year Longitudinal Study with Young Adult Swiss Men

European Addiction Research January 1, 2020 Franz Moggi, Deborah Schorno, Leila M. Soravia et al. 22 citations

Young men with attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) symptoms at age 20 are more likely to start using certain substances and develop alcohol use disorder by age 25, even after accounting for conduct disorder and sensation seeking. ADHD predicted the initiation of hallucinogens, meth-/amphetamines, ecstasy/MDMA, non-medical use of ADHD medication and sedatives, and alcohol use disorder, but not alcohol or smoking initiation. No escalation of weekly drinking, smoking, or annual cannabis use occurred between ages 20 and 25. Identifying ADHD in early adulthood may help target interventions to reduce later drug use and alcohol problems.

Psychedelics: From Cave Art to 21st-Century Medicine for Addiction

European Addiction Research September 25, 2024 Ioanna A. Vamvakopoulou, David Nutt 13 citations

Classic psychedelics (psilocybin, LSD, DMT, mescaline) and atypical ones (ketamine, ibogaine, 5-MeO-DMT, MDMA) show promise as therapeutic alternatives for addiction, improving psychological and physiological symptoms of dependence. The review covers pharmacology, properties from pre-clinical and clinical research, and evidence from controlled studies and naturalistic or ceremonial settings, identifying proposed therapeutic mechanisms. Understanding ancient and present-day knowledge of these substances may offer hope for treating addiction, especially in individuals who have not responded to conventional methods.