Episode of harmful use of volatile inhalants
Episódio de uso nocivo de inalantes voláteis
CategoryDefinition
An episode of volatile inhalant use or unintentional exposure (e.g., occupational exposure) that has caused damage to a person’s physical or mental health or has resulted in behaviour leading to harm to the health of others. Harm to health of the individual occurs due to one or more of the following: (1) behaviour related to intoxication; (2) direct or secondary toxic effects on body organs and systems; or (3) a harmful route of administration. Harm to health of others includes any form of physical harm, including trauma, or mental disorder that is directly attributable to behaviour due to volatile inhalant intoxication on the part of the person to whom the diagnosis of single episode of harmful use applies. This diagnosis should not be made if the harm is attributed to a known pattern of volatile inhalant use.
Diagnostic Criteria
Essential (Required) Features:
- An episode of use of volatile inhalants that has caused clinically significant damage to a person’s physical health or mental health (e.g., Volatile Inhalant-Induced Mood Disorder), or has resulted in behaviour leading to harm to the health of others.
- Harm to health of the individual occurs due to one or more of the following: (1) behaviour related to intoxication; (2) direct or secondary toxic effects on body organs and systems; or (3) a harmful route of administration.
- Harm to health of others includes any form of physical harm, including trauma, or mental disorder that is directly attributable to behaviour due to Volatile Inhalant Intoxication on the part of the person to whom the diagnosis of Episode of Harmful Use of Volatile Inhalants applies.
- Harm to health is not better accounted for by another medical condition or another mental disorder, including another Disorder Due to Substance Use (e.g., Substance Withdrawal).
Note: Harm to the health of the person to whom the diagnosis applies includes injuries caused by behaviour related to intoxication (e.g., impulsive aggressive behaviour, psychomotor impairment leading to injury), acute health problems resulting from substance use (e.g., overdose, acute gastritis, the effects of hypoxia or prolonged hyperactivity or inactivity), and exacerbation or decompensation of pre-existing chronic health problems (e.g., hypertension, liver disease, or peptic ulceration). Harm may also result from a harmful route of administration (e.g., injecting drug use causing blood-borne virus infections, cocaine use causing a perforated nasal septum). The relevant diagnostic codes from other chapters of the ICD-11, including the chapter on Injury, Poisoning or Certain Other Consequences of External Causes, should be used to describe the specific health consequences of the harmful substance use.
Harm to the health of others includes any form of physical harm, including trauma (e.g., impaired driving causing a motor vehicle accident, assaultive behaviour leading to bodily harm to another person) or mental disorder (e.g., Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder arising from an assault by the intoxicated individual) that is directly attributable to behaviour due to substance intoxication on the part of the person to whom the diagnosis of Episode of Harmful Psychoactive Substance Use applies.
Additional Clinical Features:
- There must be explicit evidence of harm to the individual’s physical or mental health, or of substance-related behaviour due to intoxication that has led to harm to the physical or mental health of others. There must also be a clear causal relationship between the harm to health and the episode of volatile inhalant use in question.
- The likelihood of harm to self or others due behaviour related to intoxication varies substantially by substance. For example, such behaviour is unlikely to arise from caffeine or nicotine intoxication.
- Volatile Inhalant use commonly occurs in the context of other mental disorders. An additional diagnosis of Episode of Harmful Use of Volatile Inhalants can be made if the index episode of volatile inhalant use has resulted in clinically significant harm to the individual’s physical health or has exacerbated or triggered an episode of a pre-existing mental disorder (e.g., a Manic or Depressive Episode or a psychotic episode).
- A diagnosis of Episode of Harmful Use of Volatile Inhalants often signals an opportunity for intervention, typically a low intensity intervention that can be implemented in a wide range of settings that is specifically aimed at reducing the likelihood of additional harmful episodes or of progression to Harmful Pattern of Use or Volatile Inhalant Dependence.
- As more information becomes available indicating that the episode is part of a continuous or recurrent pattern of volatile inhalant use, or if additional harmful episodes occur, a diagnosis of Episode of Harmful Use of Volatile Inhalants should be changed to Harmful Pattern of Use of Volatile Inhalants or Volatile Inhalant Dependence, as appropriate.
Boundary with Normality (Threshold):
- The diagnosis of Episode of Harmful Use of Volatile Inhalants requires clinically significant harm to the individual’s physical or mental health or that of others. Examples of impact on physical or mental health that would not be considered clinically significant include mild hangover, brief episodes of vomiting, or transient depressed mood.
- A range of social problems may be associated with an episode of substance use that are not sufficiently severe to constitute clinically significant harm to physical or mental health (e.g., missed appointments, arguments with loved ones)- Such problems are not a sufficient basis for a diagnosis of Episode of Harmful Use of Volatile Inhalants.
Boundaries with Other Disorders and Conditions (Differential Diagnosis):
- Boundary with Hazardous Substance Use: Hazardous Substance Use is classified in the chapter on ‘Factors Influencing Health Status or Contact with Health Services’ in the ICD-11 and not in the chapter on Mental, Behavioural, and Neurodevelopmental Disorders. Hazardous Substance Use appreciably increases the risk of harmful physical or mental health consequences to the user or to others to an extent that warrants attention and advice from health professionals, but has not resulted in specific identifiable harm and therefore does not meet the diagnostic requirements for Episode of Harmful Use of Volatile Inhalants.
- Boundary with Harmful Pattern of Use of Volatile Inhalants: If the harm to health is a result of a known episodic or continuous pattern of substance use and all other diagnostic requirements are met, a diagnosis of Harmful Pattern of Use of Volatile Inhalants should be assigned. Substance use is generally considered to be following a pattern if there has been at least episodic or intermittent use over a period of at least 12 months. If harm is caused by use of volatile inhalants but no information is available about the pattern or history of substance use, a diagnosis of Episode of Harmful Use of Volatile Inhalants may be assigned until such time as evidence for a pattern of use is ascertained.
- Boundary with Volatile Inhalant Dependence: In Volatile Inhalant Dependence, individuals use volatile inhalants persistently despite harm and adverse consequences. Harm caused by such use may be similar to that observed in Episode of Harmful Use of Volatile Inhalants. However, Volatile Inhalant Dependence also includes additional features of impaired ability to control use and increasing priority given to the substance use over other activities. Physiological features (e.g., tolerance) may also be present. If all diagnostic requirements for Volatile Inhalant Dependence are met, Episode of Harmful Use of Volatile Inhalants should not be assigned.
- Boundary with Volatile Inhalant Intoxication: Volatile Inhalant Intoxication is defined by volatile inhalant use that results in clinically significant transient volatile inhalant-specific symptoms. Recovery from Volatile Inhalant Intoxication is generally complete and without physical or mental sequelae. If there is continuing damage or harm (e.g., the effects of hypoxia, the effects of prolonged hyperactivity or inactivity, tissue damage) due to an episode of Volatile Inhalant Intoxication, a diagnosis of Episode of Harmful Use of Volatile Inhalants may be assigned. If relevant at the time of the clinical encounter (e.g., in emergency settings), Episode of Harmful Use of Volatile Inhalants may be diagnosed with an associated diagnosis of Volatile Inhalant Intoxication.
- Boundary with Volatile Inhalant-Induced Mental Disorders: Volatile Inhalant-Induced Mental Disorders can be associated with a single episode of volatile inhalant use. If a Volatile Inhalant-Induced Mental Disorder has occurred as a form of harm resulting from a single episode of volatile inhalant use, both Episode of Harmful Use of Volatile Inhalants and the relevant Volatile Inhalant-Induced Mental Disorder should be diagnosed (e.g., Episode of Harmful Volatile Inhalant Use with Volatile Inhalant-Induced Psychotic Disorder).
- Boundary with overdose: When ingestion of psychoactive substances results in symptoms of overdose (e.g., coma; life-threatening cardiac or respiratory suppression), a diagnosis from the grouping of Harmful Effects of Substances in the chapter on Injury, Poisoning or Certain Other Consequences of External Causes should also be assigned.
Exclusions
- Harmful pattern of use of volatile inhalants
- Volatile inhalant dependence