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Does Naloxone Prevent Seizure in Tramadol Intoxicated Patients?

BACKGROUND: Tramadol poisoning has increased in recent years. Seizure is one of the side-effects of tramadol toxicity. There is a controversy about possible preventive effect of naloxone in tramadol poisoning induced seizure. Therefore, this study was performed to compare seizure incidence in tramad...

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Autores principales: Eizadi-Mood, Nastaran, Ozcan, Dilek, Sabzghabaee, Ali Mohammad, Mirmoghtadaee, Parisa, Hedaiaty, Mahrang
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Medknow Publications & Media Pvt Ltd 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4018639/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24829714
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author Eizadi-Mood, Nastaran
Ozcan, Dilek
Sabzghabaee, Ali Mohammad
Mirmoghtadaee, Parisa
Hedaiaty, Mahrang
author_facet Eizadi-Mood, Nastaran
Ozcan, Dilek
Sabzghabaee, Ali Mohammad
Mirmoghtadaee, Parisa
Hedaiaty, Mahrang
author_sort Eizadi-Mood, Nastaran
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Tramadol poisoning has increased in recent years. Seizure is one of the side-effects of tramadol toxicity. There is a controversy about possible preventive effect of naloxone in tramadol poisoning induced seizure. Therefore, this study was performed to compare seizure incidence in tramadol poisoning patients who received and did not receive naloxone, as an opioid antagonist. METHODS: This study involved prospective data collection followed by retrospective analysis on 104 tramadol poisoning patients who were admitted in a referral poisoning center. The incidences of seizure were compared between patients received naloxone and those did not. Outcome was considered as survived without or with complications and death. Logistic Regression analysis was used to determine the effects of different variables on seizure incidence. RESULTS: 70 (67.3%) of the patients were men. The mean age of the patients was 26.3 ± 9 years old. 18.3% of the patients received naloxone in their treatment period. Seizure incidence was significantly higher among tramadol poisoning patients who did not receive naloxone compare with those received naloxone (14.1% vs. 5.1%). Among different variable studied, age had a significant effect on predicting of seizure (odds ratio = 2.09; 95% of confidence interval: 1.82-2.26; P value, 0.004). CONCLUSIONS: Although the seizure incidence was lower in patients with tramadol poisoning who received naloxone, the logistic regression did not support the preventive effect of naloxone on seizure in tramadol poisoning cases.
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spelling pubmed-40186392014-05-14 Does Naloxone Prevent Seizure in Tramadol Intoxicated Patients? Eizadi-Mood, Nastaran Ozcan, Dilek Sabzghabaee, Ali Mohammad Mirmoghtadaee, Parisa Hedaiaty, Mahrang Int J Prev Med Original Article BACKGROUND: Tramadol poisoning has increased in recent years. Seizure is one of the side-effects of tramadol toxicity. There is a controversy about possible preventive effect of naloxone in tramadol poisoning induced seizure. Therefore, this study was performed to compare seizure incidence in tramadol poisoning patients who received and did not receive naloxone, as an opioid antagonist. METHODS: This study involved prospective data collection followed by retrospective analysis on 104 tramadol poisoning patients who were admitted in a referral poisoning center. The incidences of seizure were compared between patients received naloxone and those did not. Outcome was considered as survived without or with complications and death. Logistic Regression analysis was used to determine the effects of different variables on seizure incidence. RESULTS: 70 (67.3%) of the patients were men. The mean age of the patients was 26.3 ± 9 years old. 18.3% of the patients received naloxone in their treatment period. Seizure incidence was significantly higher among tramadol poisoning patients who did not receive naloxone compare with those received naloxone (14.1% vs. 5.1%). Among different variable studied, age had a significant effect on predicting of seizure (odds ratio = 2.09; 95% of confidence interval: 1.82-2.26; P value, 0.004). CONCLUSIONS: Although the seizure incidence was lower in patients with tramadol poisoning who received naloxone, the logistic regression did not support the preventive effect of naloxone on seizure in tramadol poisoning cases. Medknow Publications & Media Pvt Ltd 2014-03 /pmc/articles/PMC4018639/ /pubmed/24829714 Text en Copyright: © International Journal of Preventive Medicine http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0 This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Unported, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Article
Eizadi-Mood, Nastaran
Ozcan, Dilek
Sabzghabaee, Ali Mohammad
Mirmoghtadaee, Parisa
Hedaiaty, Mahrang
Does Naloxone Prevent Seizure in Tramadol Intoxicated Patients?
title Does Naloxone Prevent Seizure in Tramadol Intoxicated Patients?
title_full Does Naloxone Prevent Seizure in Tramadol Intoxicated Patients?
title_fullStr Does Naloxone Prevent Seizure in Tramadol Intoxicated Patients?
title_full_unstemmed Does Naloxone Prevent Seizure in Tramadol Intoxicated Patients?
title_short Does Naloxone Prevent Seizure in Tramadol Intoxicated Patients?
title_sort does naloxone prevent seizure in tramadol intoxicated patients?
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4018639/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24829714
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