Understanding and Treating Other Hallucinogen Use Disorder
Addiction Medicine • Psychiatry • Community Care
Understanding and Treating Other Hallucinogen Use Disorder
Hallucinogen use can cause a spectrum of problems from occasional distressing experiences to a persistent disorder causing functional impairment. This guide focuses on non‑classic presentations — problematic use of psychedelics, dissociatives and empathogens — and practical treatment approaches.
Scope & substances
Includes classic serotonergic psychedelics (LSD, psilocybin), dissociatives (ketamine, PCP), empathogens (MDMA), and novel psychoactive substances. Problematic use may include frequent recreational use, risky contexts, psychosocial harm, or persistent perceptual/psychological symptoms.
Diagnostic markers & presentation
- Impaired control: repeated use despite problems, inability to reduce use, time spent obtaining/using the substance.
- Functional impairment: occupational, social or legal consequences from use or intoxication episodes.
- Persistent symptoms: ongoing perceptual disturbances (HPPD), anxiety, depressive episodes, or substance‑induced psychosis after repeated exposures.
Assessment approach
- Detailed substance history: agent(s), dose, frequency, setting (therapeutic, ceremonial, recreational), route, and prior adverse experiences.
- Screen for mental health disorders, suicidality, and harm (risky sexual behaviour, driving, violence).
- Collateral history where possible and cognitive/perceptual assessment (e.g., visual symptoms in HPPD).
- Investigations: consider toxicology, and baseline labs if medical complications suspected; neuroimaging when focal neurological signs or prolonged psychosis present.
Treatment principles
- Most care is psychosocial — motivational interviewing, CBT, relapse prevention and addressing co‑occurring psychiatric disorders.
- Brief harm reduction: advise avoidance of high‑risk settings, mixing with other substances (especially stimulants or alcohol) and educate about dose variability and adulterants.
- Specialist input for HPPD, persistent psychosis, or treatment‑resistant mood/anxiety disorders.
- Avoid routine re‑exposure to psychedelics; where therapeutic psychedelic use is legal/research‑based, ensure screening and supervised settings only.
Managing specific problems
Hallucinogen Persisting Perception Disorder (HPPD)
- Offer reassurance and psychoeducation; encourage avoidance of re‑exposure and triggers (bright lights, sleep deprivation).
- First‑line: CBT to address distress and functional impact. Pharmacological options have limited evidence — clonazepam shows occasional benefit; consider specialist psychiatry input before prescribing.
Substance‑induced psychosis or prolonged psychosis
- Manage medically with low‑dose antipsychotics if psychosis persists beyond expected intoxication period; benzodiazepines for acute agitation.
- Reassess for primary psychotic disorder if symptoms continue after abstinence and follow‑up.
Frequent recreational use / dependence‑like patterns
- Use motivational interviewing and CBT; consider community‑based psychosocial programmes, peer support and relapse prevention planning.
- Address underlying reasons for use (self‑medication for PTSD, depression or social factors) with integrated care.
Pharmacologic adjuncts — limited evidence
- Clonazepam: may reduce visual disturbances in HPPD for some patients — use cautiously due to dependence risk.
- Lamotrigine, SSRIs, or antipsychotics: occasionally tried for HPPD or persistent mood/psychotic symptoms but evidence is mixed; consult psychiatry.
- Ketamine misuse: consider naloxone not relevant; focus on psychosocial interventions and arrange medical review for urinary/urogenital problems associated with chronic ketamine use.
Risk reduction & safety planning
- Encourage safer use if cessation not immediately possible: test doses, trusted sitter, calm setting, avoid mixing substances, and readiness plans for medical help.
- Provide crisis contacts and plan for worsening mental health or psychosis; assess and document suicidal ideation risk.
- For festival or party settings, educate about adulterants and provide information on local harm reduction services where available.
When to escalate
- Severe, persistent psychosis, self‑harm risk, or suicidality — urgent psychiatric admission.
- Significant functional impairment despite abstinence — specialist psychiatric or neuropsychiatric review.
- HPPD causing marked distress and functional loss — consider specialist clinics and neurology/ophthalmology input if visual symptoms atypical.
Case vignette
Patient: L., 30, frequent MDMA and psychedelic use, reports increasing anxiety and intrusive visual floaters weeks after cessation. After CBT targeting anxiety and perceptual coping strategies, L. reported improved function; referred to peer support and advised to avoid further psychedelic use.
தமிழில் — சுருக்கம்
சுருக்கமாக: ஹாலுசினஜன் மருந்துகளை அடிக்கடி அல்லது அதிகப்படியாக பயன்படுத்துவோர் சிலருக்கு நீடித்த பார்வைச் சிக்கல்கள் (HPPD), மனஅழுத்தம் அல்லது மனோவியாதை உண்டாகலாம். முதன்மை சிகிச்சை மனஉளவியல் மற்றும் பாதுகாப்பு திட்டங்கள். தீவிர அறிகுறிகள் இருந்தால் உடனடி மருத்துவ உதவி தேவை.
Key takeaways
- Hallucinogen‑related problems are primarily managed with psychosocial interventions, harm reduction and treating comorbid conditions.
- HPPD and persistent psychosis require specialist involvement; pharmacological options are limited and should be used cautiously.
- Use episodes as opportunities for engagement, screening for mental illness and offering support/referral rather than moralising or abrupt discharge.
