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Biological Basis of Addiction Christine Foster, LMSW Children’s Therapist
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Biological Basis of Addiction Christine Foster, LMSW Children’s Therapist.

Dec 16, 2015

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Page 1: Biological Basis of Addiction Christine Foster, LMSW Children’s Therapist.

Biological Basis of Addiction

Christine Foster, LMSWChildren’s Therapist

Page 2: Biological Basis of Addiction Christine Foster, LMSW Children’s Therapist.
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Effects of Substance Abuse: Conception – Age 11

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Photo courtesy of Sterling Clarren, MD – Brain at 6 wks

Page 5: Biological Basis of Addiction Christine Foster, LMSW Children’s Therapist.

Faces in Fetal Alcohol Syndrome

Page 6: Biological Basis of Addiction Christine Foster, LMSW Children’s Therapist.

What we see What we think What may be really going on

What we can do

► Doesn’t follow rules

▪Noncompliance▪Attention Seeking▪Stubborn▪Purposeful

●Difficulty translating verbal directions into action●Cognitive deficit

♦Check for understanding♦Repeat instructions♦Simplify tasks

► Repeatedly makes the same mistakes

▪Manipulative▪Doing it on purpose▪Willful

●Not able to link cause and effect●Difficulty generalizing

♦Provide assistance with organization♦Structure choices

► Poor social judgment

▪Attention Seeking▪Poorly parented▪Impulsive

●Not able to interpret social cues●Desire to be liked

♦Role play♦Identify safe external support/s♦Safety planning

►Easily agitated ▪Poor self control▪Deviant

●Frustrated●Disappointed●Mental health issue

♦Teach self advocacy♦Identify and practice copingtechniques

Texas Office for Prevention of Developmental Disabilities

Page 7: Biological Basis of Addiction Christine Foster, LMSW Children’s Therapist.

Don’t TalkDon’t TrustDon’t DealDon’t Feel

Page 8: Biological Basis of Addiction Christine Foster, LMSW Children’s Therapist.

How do people get better from alcohol and drugs?

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Effects of Substance Abuse: Ages 12-25

Apoptosis = Pruning200 billion to 100 billion

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HYPOFRONTALITY:when Dopamine spikes the cortex actually shuts off

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How dodrugs & alcohol effect the brain during the

pruning process?

Page 19: Biological Basis of Addiction Christine Foster, LMSW Children’s Therapist.

Limbic SystemFight or FlightPleasurable Experiences: Dopamine

Page 20: Biological Basis of Addiction Christine Foster, LMSW Children’s Therapist.

0

200

400

600

800

1000

1200

Food

Sex

Cocaine

Meth

100%150%

350%1100%

Dopamine Release

Page 21: Biological Basis of Addiction Christine Foster, LMSW Children’s Therapist.

If you arrest here but stop using here

Age 12

Page 22: Biological Basis of Addiction Christine Foster, LMSW Children’s Therapist.

Arrested Development Effects

Stuck in psychosocial stage of development

10% Decrease in Hippocampus functioning (converts information to memory)

Increased social disinhibition Risky, impulsive behavior Poor planning &

judgment Little ability to weigh

consequences

Page 23: Biological Basis of Addiction Christine Foster, LMSW Children’s Therapist.

Developmental Age of Parents

Parents with Fetal Alcohol Syndrome

Teen Parents

Parents with Arrested Development

Page 24: Biological Basis of Addiction Christine Foster, LMSW Children’s Therapist.

Practical Applications

• Connect Client to Appropriate Service– Parent Coaching, Individual Therapy, In or

Outpatient Treatment,12-step, ACA, Alanon• Connect Child to Appropriate Service– Play Therapy, High Risk Classes, Individual or

Family Therapy• Teach Parents Executive Functioning Skills• Teach Parents To Teach Executive Functioning

Skills

Page 25: Biological Basis of Addiction Christine Foster, LMSW Children’s Therapist.

Tools for Working with Families

• Play: A child’s work• Patterned, Repetitive, Predictable &

Rhythmic• Praise Executive Functioning in Parents• Teach Parents What To Say During Family

Dinners• Behavior Modification Contracts

Page 27: Biological Basis of Addiction Christine Foster, LMSW Children’s Therapist.

Prefrontal Cortex Thinking: Executive Functioning

1. Abstract; conceptual understanding2. Impulse Control3. Problem-Solving4. Decision-Making5. Judgment6. Emotion Regulation/Frustration Tolerance7. Ability to Feel Empathy

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References•Califano Jr., Joseph (2009),How to Raise a Drug-Free Kid, The Straight Dope for Parents.•Giedd. J. N. (2004).Structural magnetic resonance imaging of the adolescent brain. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1021, 77-85.•Spear, L. P. (2002). Alcohol’s effects on adolescents. Alcohol Health and Research World, 26 (4), 287-291.Suggested Reading•Dahl, R.E. & Spear, L.P. (Eds.) (2004). Adolescent brain development: vulnerabilities and opportunities. New York: Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, Volume 1021. •Dubuc, B. (n.d.).The brain from top to bottom. McGill University web site:•http://www.thebrain.mcgill.ca/flash/index_d.html•http://www.childtraumaacademy.com/amazing_brain/index.html•http://fasdcenter.samhsa.gov•http://nofas.org•Landreth, G. (2002). Play Therapy: The Art of the Relationship. Brunner Routledge.•Nestler, E. J., & Malenka, R. C. (2004, March). The addicted brain. Scientific American, 290 (3), 78-85.•Underwood, N. (2009). The teenage brain: Why adolescents sleep in, take risks, and won’t listen to reason. The Walrus Magazine.•Wallis, C. (2004, May 10). What makes teens tick? Time, 163, 57-65.•Walsh, D. (2004). Why do they act that way? A survival guide to the adolescent brain for you and your teen. New York: Free Press.