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A Study of Methadone-Poisoned Children Referred to Hamadan’s Besat Hospital/Iran

OBJECTIVE: Increasing use of methadone in withdrawal programs has increased methadone poisoning in children. This research aimed to study the causes of incidence of poisoning in children and its side-effects. MATERIALS & METHODS: In this research, The hospital records of all methadone-poisoned c...

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Autores principales: BAZMAMOUN, Hassan, FAYYAZi, Afshin, KHAJEH, Ali, SABZEHEI, Mohammad Kazem, KHEZRIAN, Fuzieh
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Shahid Beheshti University of Medical Sciences 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4058063/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24949049
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author BAZMAMOUN, Hassan
FAYYAZi, Afshin
KHAJEH, Ali
SABZEHEI, Mohammad Kazem
KHEZRIAN, Fuzieh
author_facet BAZMAMOUN, Hassan
FAYYAZi, Afshin
KHAJEH, Ali
SABZEHEI, Mohammad Kazem
KHEZRIAN, Fuzieh
author_sort BAZMAMOUN, Hassan
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: Increasing use of methadone in withdrawal programs has increased methadone poisoning in children. This research aimed to study the causes of incidence of poisoning in children and its side-effects. MATERIALS & METHODS: In this research, The hospital records of all methadone-poisoned children referred to Hamadan’s Be’sat Hospital from June 2007 to March 2013, were studied. Children with a definite history of methadone use or proven existence of methadone in their urine, were studied. RESULTS: During 5 years, 62 children with the mean age of 53.24±29.50 months were hospitalized due to methadone use. There was a significant relationship between delayed referral to hospital and increased bradypnea. According to their history, 25.8% and 58.1% of the children had been poisoned by methadone tablet and syrup, respectively. The most common initial complaint expressed by parents, was decreased consciousness (85.5%). During the initial examination, decreased consciousness, meiosis, and respiratory depression were observed in 91.9%, 82.3%, and 69.4% of the cases, respectively. Nine patients required mechanical ventilation. There was a significant relationship between the need for mechanical ventilation and seizure with initial symptom of emesis. There were two cases of death (3.2%), both of which were secondary to prolonged hypoxia and brain death. There was a significant relationship between poor patient prognosis (death) and presence of cyanosis in early symptoms, seizure, hypotension, duration of decreased consciousness, and duration of mechanical ventilation. CONCLUSION: This research indicated that the occurrence of seizure, hypotension, and cyanosis in the early stages of poisoning is associated with an increased risk of side effects and death and are serious warning signs. Early diagnosis and intervention can improve outcomes of methadone-poisoned children.
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spelling pubmed-40580632014-06-19 A Study of Methadone-Poisoned Children Referred to Hamadan’s Besat Hospital/Iran BAZMAMOUN, Hassan FAYYAZi, Afshin KHAJEH, Ali SABZEHEI, Mohammad Kazem KHEZRIAN, Fuzieh Iran J Child Neurol Original Article OBJECTIVE: Increasing use of methadone in withdrawal programs has increased methadone poisoning in children. This research aimed to study the causes of incidence of poisoning in children and its side-effects. MATERIALS & METHODS: In this research, The hospital records of all methadone-poisoned children referred to Hamadan’s Be’sat Hospital from June 2007 to March 2013, were studied. Children with a definite history of methadone use or proven existence of methadone in their urine, were studied. RESULTS: During 5 years, 62 children with the mean age of 53.24±29.50 months were hospitalized due to methadone use. There was a significant relationship between delayed referral to hospital and increased bradypnea. According to their history, 25.8% and 58.1% of the children had been poisoned by methadone tablet and syrup, respectively. The most common initial complaint expressed by parents, was decreased consciousness (85.5%). During the initial examination, decreased consciousness, meiosis, and respiratory depression were observed in 91.9%, 82.3%, and 69.4% of the cases, respectively. Nine patients required mechanical ventilation. There was a significant relationship between the need for mechanical ventilation and seizure with initial symptom of emesis. There were two cases of death (3.2%), both of which were secondary to prolonged hypoxia and brain death. There was a significant relationship between poor patient prognosis (death) and presence of cyanosis in early symptoms, seizure, hypotension, duration of decreased consciousness, and duration of mechanical ventilation. CONCLUSION: This research indicated that the occurrence of seizure, hypotension, and cyanosis in the early stages of poisoning is associated with an increased risk of side effects and death and are serious warning signs. Early diagnosis and intervention can improve outcomes of methadone-poisoned children. Shahid Beheshti University of Medical Sciences 2014 /pmc/articles/PMC4058063/ /pubmed/24949049 Text en This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/) which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Article
BAZMAMOUN, Hassan
FAYYAZi, Afshin
KHAJEH, Ali
SABZEHEI, Mohammad Kazem
KHEZRIAN, Fuzieh
A Study of Methadone-Poisoned Children Referred to Hamadan’s Besat Hospital/Iran
title A Study of Methadone-Poisoned Children Referred to Hamadan’s Besat Hospital/Iran
title_full A Study of Methadone-Poisoned Children Referred to Hamadan’s Besat Hospital/Iran
title_fullStr A Study of Methadone-Poisoned Children Referred to Hamadan’s Besat Hospital/Iran
title_full_unstemmed A Study of Methadone-Poisoned Children Referred to Hamadan’s Besat Hospital/Iran
title_short A Study of Methadone-Poisoned Children Referred to Hamadan’s Besat Hospital/Iran
title_sort study of methadone-poisoned children referred to hamadan’s besat hospital/iran
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4058063/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24949049
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