Cargando…

Understanding Heroin Overdose: A Study of the Acute Respiratory Depressant Effects of Injected Pharmaceutical Heroin

Opioids are respiratory depressants and heroin/opioid overdose is a major contributor to the excess mortality of heroin addicts. The individual and situational variability of respiratory depression caused by intravenous heroin is poorly understood. This study used advanced respiratory monitoring to...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Jolley, Caroline J., Bell, James, Rafferty, Gerrard F., Moxham, John, Strang, John
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4619694/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26495843
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0140995
_version_ 1782397161601761280
author Jolley, Caroline J.
Bell, James
Rafferty, Gerrard F.
Moxham, John
Strang, John
author_facet Jolley, Caroline J.
Bell, James
Rafferty, Gerrard F.
Moxham, John
Strang, John
author_sort Jolley, Caroline J.
collection PubMed
description Opioids are respiratory depressants and heroin/opioid overdose is a major contributor to the excess mortality of heroin addicts. The individual and situational variability of respiratory depression caused by intravenous heroin is poorly understood. This study used advanced respiratory monitoring to follow the time course and severity of acute opioid-induced respiratory depression. 10 patients (9/10 with chronic airflow obstruction) undergoing supervised injectable opioid treatment for heroin addiction received their usual prescribed dose of injectable opioid (diamorphine or methadone) (IOT), and their usual prescribed dose of oral opioid (methadone or sustained release oral morphine) after 30 minutes. The main outcome measures were pulse oximetry (SpO(2)%), end-tidal CO(2)% (ETCO(2)%) and neural respiratory drive (NRD) (quantified using parasternal intercostal muscle electromyography). Significant respiratory depression was defined as absence of inspiratory airflow >10s, SpO(2)% < 90% for >10s and ETCO(2)% per breath >6.5%. Increases in ETCO(2)% indicated significant respiratory depression following IOT in 8/10 patients at 30 minutes. In contrast, SpO(2)% indicated significant respiratory depression in only 4/10 patients, with small absolute changes in SpO(2)% at 30 minutes. A decline in NRD from baseline to 30 minutes post IOT was also observed, but was not statistically significant. Baseline NRD and opioid-induced drop in SpO(2)% were inversely related. We conclude that significant acute respiratory depression is commonly induced by opioid drugs prescribed to treat opioid addiction. Hypoventilation is reliably detected by capnography, but not by SpO(2)% alone. Chronic suppression of NRD in the presence of underlying lung disease may be a risk factor for acute opioid-induced respiratory depression.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-4619694
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2015
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-46196942015-10-29 Understanding Heroin Overdose: A Study of the Acute Respiratory Depressant Effects of Injected Pharmaceutical Heroin Jolley, Caroline J. Bell, James Rafferty, Gerrard F. Moxham, John Strang, John PLoS One Research Article Opioids are respiratory depressants and heroin/opioid overdose is a major contributor to the excess mortality of heroin addicts. The individual and situational variability of respiratory depression caused by intravenous heroin is poorly understood. This study used advanced respiratory monitoring to follow the time course and severity of acute opioid-induced respiratory depression. 10 patients (9/10 with chronic airflow obstruction) undergoing supervised injectable opioid treatment for heroin addiction received their usual prescribed dose of injectable opioid (diamorphine or methadone) (IOT), and their usual prescribed dose of oral opioid (methadone or sustained release oral morphine) after 30 minutes. The main outcome measures were pulse oximetry (SpO(2)%), end-tidal CO(2)% (ETCO(2)%) and neural respiratory drive (NRD) (quantified using parasternal intercostal muscle electromyography). Significant respiratory depression was defined as absence of inspiratory airflow >10s, SpO(2)% < 90% for >10s and ETCO(2)% per breath >6.5%. Increases in ETCO(2)% indicated significant respiratory depression following IOT in 8/10 patients at 30 minutes. In contrast, SpO(2)% indicated significant respiratory depression in only 4/10 patients, with small absolute changes in SpO(2)% at 30 minutes. A decline in NRD from baseline to 30 minutes post IOT was also observed, but was not statistically significant. Baseline NRD and opioid-induced drop in SpO(2)% were inversely related. We conclude that significant acute respiratory depression is commonly induced by opioid drugs prescribed to treat opioid addiction. Hypoventilation is reliably detected by capnography, but not by SpO(2)% alone. Chronic suppression of NRD in the presence of underlying lung disease may be a risk factor for acute opioid-induced respiratory depression. Public Library of Science 2015-10-23 /pmc/articles/PMC4619694/ /pubmed/26495843 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0140995 Text en © 2015 Jolley et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Jolley, Caroline J.
Bell, James
Rafferty, Gerrard F.
Moxham, John
Strang, John
Understanding Heroin Overdose: A Study of the Acute Respiratory Depressant Effects of Injected Pharmaceutical Heroin
title Understanding Heroin Overdose: A Study of the Acute Respiratory Depressant Effects of Injected Pharmaceutical Heroin
title_full Understanding Heroin Overdose: A Study of the Acute Respiratory Depressant Effects of Injected Pharmaceutical Heroin
title_fullStr Understanding Heroin Overdose: A Study of the Acute Respiratory Depressant Effects of Injected Pharmaceutical Heroin
title_full_unstemmed Understanding Heroin Overdose: A Study of the Acute Respiratory Depressant Effects of Injected Pharmaceutical Heroin
title_short Understanding Heroin Overdose: A Study of the Acute Respiratory Depressant Effects of Injected Pharmaceutical Heroin
title_sort understanding heroin overdose: a study of the acute respiratory depressant effects of injected pharmaceutical heroin
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4619694/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26495843
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0140995
work_keys_str_mv AT jolleycarolinej understandingheroinoverdoseastudyoftheacuterespiratorydepressanteffectsofinjectedpharmaceuticalheroin
AT belljames understandingheroinoverdoseastudyoftheacuterespiratorydepressanteffectsofinjectedpharmaceuticalheroin
AT raffertygerrardf understandingheroinoverdoseastudyoftheacuterespiratorydepressanteffectsofinjectedpharmaceuticalheroin
AT moxhamjohn understandingheroinoverdoseastudyoftheacuterespiratorydepressanteffectsofinjectedpharmaceuticalheroin
AT strangjohn understandingheroinoverdoseastudyoftheacuterespiratorydepressanteffectsofinjectedpharmaceuticalheroin