Association of volatile substance, nitrous oxide and alkyl nitrate use with mental health in UK adolescents

Jemma Hawkins, Lindsey A. Hines, Chris Bonell, Matthew Hickman, Linda Adara, Julia Townson, Rebecca Cannings-John, Laurence Moore, James White
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Abstract

Background

‘Inhalants’ have been associated with poorer mental health in adolescence, but little is known of associations with specific types of inhalants.

Aims

We aimed to investigate associations of using volatile substances, nitrous oxide and alkyl nitrates with mental health problems in adolescence.

Method

We conducted a cross-sectional analysis using data from 13- to 14-year-old adolescents across England and Wales collected between September 2019 and March 2020. Multilevel logistic regression examined associations between lifetime use of volatile substances, nitrous oxide and alkyl nitrates with self-reported symptoms of probable depression, anxiety, conduct disorder and auditory hallucinations.

Results

Of the 6672 adolescents in the study, 5.1% reported use of nitrous oxide, 4.9% volatile solvents and 0.1% alkyl nitrates. After accounting for multiple testing, adolescents who had used volatile solvents were significantly more likely to report probable depressive (odds ratio = 4.59, 95% CI 3.58, 5.88), anxiety (odds ratio = 3.47, 95% CI 2.72, 4.43) or conduct disorder (odds ratio = 7.52, 95% CI 5.80, 9.76) and auditory hallucinations (odds ratio = 5.35, 95% CI 4.00, 7.17) than those who had not. Nitrous oxide use was significantly associated with probable depression and conduct disorder but not anxiety disorder or auditory hallucinations. Alkyl nitrate use was rare and not associated with mental health outcomes. Adjustment for use of other inhalants, tobacco and alcohol resulted in marked attenuation but socioeconomic disadvantage had little effect.

Conclusion

To our knowledge, this study provides the first general population evidence that volatile solvents and nitrous oxide are associated with probable mental health disorders in adolescence. These findings require replication, ideally with prospective designs.

英国青少年使用挥发性物质、一氧化二氮和硝酸烷基酯与心理健康的关系
背景 "吸入剂 "与青春期较差的心理健康有关,但人们对特定类型吸入剂的相关性知之甚少。多层次逻辑回归检验了终生使用挥发性物质、一氧化二氮和烷基硝酸盐与自我报告的可能抑郁、焦虑、行为障碍和幻听症状之间的关联。结果在参与研究的 6672 名青少年中,5.1% 报告使用过一氧化二氮,4.9% 使用过挥发性溶剂,0.1% 使用过烷基硝酸盐。在考虑了多重测试后,使用过挥发性溶剂的青少年报告可能患有抑郁症(几率比=4.59,95% CI 3.58,5.88)、焦虑症(几率比=3.47,95% CI 2.72,4.43)或行为障碍(几率比=7.52,95% CI 5.80,9.76)和幻听(几率比=5.35,95% CI 4.00,7.17)的几率明显高于未使用过挥发性溶剂的青少年。使用一氧化二氮与可能的抑郁症和行为障碍有明显关联,但与焦虑症或幻听无关。使用硝酸烷基酯的情况很少见,且与心理健康结果无关。对使用其他吸入剂、烟草和酒精的情况进行调整后,结果明显减弱,但社会经济劣势几乎没有影响。 结论 据我们所知,这项研究首次为普通人群提供了证据,证明挥发性溶剂和一氧化二氮与青少年可能出现的心理健康障碍有关。这些研究结果需要复制,最好是采用前瞻性设计。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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