- Last edited on April 30, 2020
Psychiatric Side Effects of Medications and Substances
Primer
Medications and recreational substances can have profound psychiatric symptoms for patients.
Medications with Depression as a Side Effect
Substance/Medication-Induced Major or Mild Neurocognitive Disorder
Criterion A
The criteria are met for major or mild neurocognitive disorder.
Criterion B
The neurocognitive impairments do not occur exclusively during the course of a delirium and persist beyond the usual duration of intoxication and acute withdrawal.
Criterion C
The involved substance or medication and duration and extent of use are capable of producing the neurocognitive impairment.
Criterion D
The temporal course of the neurocognitive deficits is consistent with the timing of substance or medication use and abstinence (e.g., the deficits remain stable or improve after a period of abstinence).
Criterion E
The neurocognitive disorder is not attributable to another medical condition or is not better explained by another mental disorder
Specifiers
Substance Specifier
- Alcohol (major neurocognitive disorder), nonamnestic-confabulatory type
- Alcohol (major neurocognitive disorder), amnestic-confabulatory type
- Alcohol (mild neurocognitive disorder)
- Inhalant (major neurocognitive disorder)
- Inhalant (mild neurocognitive disorder)
- Sedative, hypnotic, or anxiolytic (major neurocognitive disorder)
- Sedative, hypnotic, or anxiolytic (mild neurocognitive disorder)
- Other (or unknown) substance (major neurocognitive disorder)
- Other (or unknown) substance (mild neurocognitive disorder)
Other Specifier
Specify if:
- Persistent: neurocognitive impairment continues to be significant after an extended period of abstinence.