Pubdate: Sat, 22 Apr 2017
Source: National Post (Canada)
Copyright: 2017 Canwest Publishing Inc.
Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/wEtbT4yU
Website: http://www.nationalpost.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/286
Author: Amitha Kalaichandran
Page: A8

A PARENT'S WORST NIGHTMARE

Young brains more vulnerable to fentanyl and opioid addiction

At 23, Cameron Shaver seemed to be on track for success with a
landscaping business, a new car, and he was thinking about heading
back to school to take culinary arts.

The jack-of-all-trades from Winnipeg was an inspiration to his
friends. He'd come a long way from his earlier teen years, when he had
struggled with drug addiction. Back then, it was ecstasy.

Cameron had been clean for years when, last September, his mother
Sandi received the phone call that no mother should get. Cameron had
died of a fentanyl overdose.

"That's not how his life was supposed to go," she said. "You aren't
supposed to bury your child. How do these dealers not know these drugs
are killing our kids?"

Fentanyl is a parent's worst nightmare. The opioid crisis in Canada is
not just a street problem - kids from seemingly good homes are
overdosing in Starbucks bathrooms and ending up in hospital emergency
rooms.

This past Valentine's Day, 14-year-old Chloe Kotval died from a
fentanyl overdose in Ottawa. And last month, the B.C. coroner's office
found that the August death of 16-year-old Gwyn KennyStaddon in a
Starbucks bathroom in Port Moody was from an overdose of heroin and
fentanyl.

Last November, the Canadian Institute for Health Information reported
that youth aged 15 to 24 experienced a 62 per cent increase in
hospitalizations for opioid use since 2007. This represents the
fastest increase of any age group.

And a new report out this week from the Ontario Drug Policy Research
Network says fentanyl-related deaths in all age groups in the province
has increased 548 per cent between 2006 to 2015.

Ten per cent of Ontario students in Grades 7-12 self-reported using a
prescription opioid for non-medical reasons at least once during the
previous year, according to a 2015 report from the Centre for
Addiction and Mental Health. Four per cent reported using these drugs
six times or more in the past year.

The numbers could be underestimated, according to the study's authors.
Unlike alcohol or marijuana, it is harder for teachers and parents to
detect opioid use, "so we are relying more heavily on self-report,"
said Robert Mann, the study's co-author. While the 2015 version of the
study did not ask specifically about fentanyl, this year's survey,
currently underway, will.

In British Columbia the statistics are especially harsh: there were 12
overdose deaths from illicit drugs among 14-18 year olds in 2016,
according to the B.C. Coroners Service - half of them were confirmed
fentanyl-related. Final testing could confirm more. There have been
two more overdose deaths in that age group as of March 31 this year.

Rashmi Chadha, an addictions physician with Vancouver Coastal Health,
said some young people start using opioids for pain, but they can
quickly become dependent on them.

"Many of the young adults that I see are actively seeking fentanyl
over heroin. One 17-year-old girl had received a large dispense of
oxycodone from her surgeon for pain following cosmetic surgery,"
Chadha said. "She began refilling it every two weeks, saying she had
ongoing pain, but confided that she was really using it for sleep and
to share with her friends to get high. She was cut off by her doctor
after about a month, then developed opioid withdrawal and ended up
buying it on the street.

"Over time oxycodone became too expensive, so she turned to cheaper
heroin and fentanyl," Chadha said.

It is an unfortunate twist of nature that while the young brain is
developing, it is also more vulnerable to becoming addicted.

The adolescent-young adult period is a key transitional period for the
brain. Brain cells - "neurons" - are pruning, where some connections
are kept and others dissolve. White-matter volume increases and
becomes more organized. Grey matter - the cell bodies themselves -
decreases.

The largest change is the development of the prefrontal cortex. This
is the part of the brain involved in executive functioning - "higher
order" functions like decision making. The prefrontal cortex helps
override impulsivity when it comes to risk-taking, but typically is
not fully developed until after age 25.

"Simply put, the teen brain is not the adult brain," said Sion Harris,
the co-director of the Center for Adolescent Substance Abuse Research
at Boston Children's Hospital.

"Through adolescence into the mid-20s, our brain gradually strengthens
our ability to self-reflect, organize towards goals, plan out steps
towards those goals, and perhaps more importantly, inhibit impulses
that aren't the wisest and regulate emotions - basically, things we
would associate with a mature adult," Harris explained.

"I talk to parents all the time and say, 'You still need to be (your
teens') prefrontal cortex during this time,' " Harris said.

Marisa Silveri is a professor of psychiatry and a neuroscientist at
Boston's McLean Hospital and Harvard Medical School, who focuses on
adolescent brain development, specifically risk factors for substance
abuse. "While there are no published neuroimaging studies on fentanyl
and the teen brain, we can see from research on oxycodone that these
opioids decrease the connectivity in the prefrontal cortex and alter
the thickness of the cortex," Silveri said.

Therein lies the vicious cycle: adolescents have a still developing
prefrontal cortex, which can facilitate drug seeking behaviour. The
drug then alters the development of this area of the brain.

And opioids, especially fentanyl, are powerfully addictive. They act
on special opioid receptors in the brain, and the strength of the
opioid depends largely on two things: how quickly it reaches the brain
once it's in the blood; and how tightly it binds to the "mu" opioid
receptor, which regulates the reward pathway of the brain.

"We know that fentanyl binds very tightly to the opioid receptor and
it permeates the blood-brain barrier quickly. All this translates to a
small dose of the drug having a huge effect. Essentially, you would
need 40 to 50 times more heroin to get the same effect," explained
Hakique Virani, a public health and addictions medicine specialist at
the University of Alberta.

A stronger version of fentanyl, called carfentanil, is now becoming
more accessible, he said. It binds even more tightly to the opioid
receptors and reaches the brain more rapidly than fentanyl.

Fair Vassoler, a neuroscientist at Tufts University, studies the
effects of opioids on rats. "We have to remember that our bodies make
opioids - the 'feel-good endorphins' from pleasurable activities for
instance. They help us deal with stress, and bind to these receptors
we have in the brain. These external drugs can alter that," she said

Since there is limited information around fentanyl and the brain,
especially the teenage brain, researchers and physicians are forced to
extrapolate from existing research, mainly around oxycodone and heroin.

This is a problem, said Scott Hadland, a specialist in adolescent and
addiction medicine specialist at Boston Medical Center. "(U.S.)
studies of teens show a decline in experimenting with opioids, but an
increase in the risk of overdose, which in part may be due to fentanyl
making its way into the drug supply," he said.

Hadland said some teens in his clinic recalled knowing at an early age
about vulnerabilities they have toward opioids. "In my practice it's
common to have a 15- or 16-year-old with opioid addiction tell me they
remember having a different experience with codeine in cough syrup
when they were a child, that they could feel it affected them more
than other kids," he said.

"Those of us who are pediatric addiction specialists know that one of
the most important things we can do is intervene quickly when early
signs of addiction are present," Hadland said.

Part of the problem with that is the symptoms of opioid drug use are
not as obvious to parents and teachers and caregivers as they are with
alcohol or other drugs such as marijuana or crystal meth, a highly
addictive stimulant. Among some of the symptoms of fentanyl and other
opioids are drowsiness, confusion, constipation, nausea. At higher
doses it can slow down or stop breathing.

In an overdose, pupils becomes smaller (pinpoint pupils), the victim
becomes unconscious and breathing stops (respiratory depression).
These are referred to as the "opioid overdose triad."

Hadland advises parents to take general preventive measures - locking
up prescription medications, disposing medications that are not needed
and maintaining open lines of communication.

"Rather than jumping in and asking a teen directly whether they've
used substances, it may be easier for parents to start the
conversation by first asking what they are seeing in school among
their peers - that gives a sense of their risk environment, and is a
nice opener to a discussion in which a parent can then find out
whether their teen has used substances."

Sandi Shaver agrees. Since Cameron died, she's helping others through
her work as a mentor for street youth at Circle of Care in Winnipeg.
"Many of these kids want to stop but don't know how."

- --------------------------------------------------------------

Amitha Kalaichandran is a pediatrics resident and fellow in global 
journalism at the Munk School of Global Affairs.
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MAP posted-by: Matt