Gene/Protein
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Enzyme
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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0034063 (
pulmonary edema
)
10,665
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Methadone
is a synthetic opioid with excellent oral bioavailability, variable, but long duration of action and extremely low cost. Our group has found that methadone is well tolerated in patients with difficult pain syndromes who are receiving high dose opioids. However, because of high interpersonal variation in bioavailability and the long duration of action of this drug, treatments should be highly personalized. We report on a 61 year old cancer patient who was switched from 84 mg/day of subcutaneous hydromorphone to 90 mg/day of oral methadone. On this dose, she developed respiratory depression and non-cardiogenic
pulmonary edema
that responded to subcutaneous naloxone and methadone discontinuation. Our findings suggest that standard equalanalgesic tables are unreliable for methadone titration. Switchovers should take place slowly and in a personalized fashion.
...
PMID:Respiratory depression in a patient receiving oral methadone for cancer pain. 767 74
Acute heroin overdose is a common daily experience in the urban and suburban United States and accounts for many preventable deaths. Heroin acts as a pro-drug that allows rapid and complete central nervous system absorption; this accounts for the drug's euphoric and toxic effects. The heroin overdose syndrome (sensitivity for diagnosing heroin overdose, 92%; specificity, 76%) consists of abnormal mental status, substantially decreased respiration, and miotic pupils. The response of naloxone does not improve the sensitivity of this diagnosis. Most overdoses occur at home in the company of others and are more common in the setting of other drugs. Heroin-related deaths are strongly associated with use of alcohol or other drugs. Patients with clinically significant respiratory compromise need treatment, which includes airway management and intravenous or subcutaneous naloxone. Hospital observation for several hours is necessary for recurrence of hypoventilation or other complications. About 3% to 7% of treated patients require hospital admission for pneumonia, noncardiogenic
pulmonary edema
, or other complications.
Methadone
maintenance is an effective preventive measure, and others strategies should be studied.
...
PMID:Acute heroin overdose. 1018 29
Methadone
is a synthetic opioid, used both as an analgesic in severe pain relief and now mainly in the treatment of opiate dependence. Such use of the drug has increased as its advantages have become widely recognized. There are undesirable outcomes from its greater use, including a substantial market in diverted methadone and a high number of deaths where the drug has been implicated. It is important to understand how and why methadone causes death so that such fatalities can be minimized, and to disseminate such information. This paper presents an overview of the chief effects of methadone on the human body, considering its metabolism, drug interactions and tolerance. The principal mechanisms by which methadone causes death are discussed: respiratory depression, aspiration of vomit,
pulmonary oedema
, bronchopneumonia, cardiac problems and renal failure. Many such deaths are preventable, if drug interactions and polydrug use are avoided, its longer period of metabolism and individuals' tolerance levels are considered. It is hoped that this paper will (a) help guide health professionals in their management and treatment of patients participating in methadone treatment programmes, and (b) provide some basic information for those dealing with individuals who have consumed methadone.
...
PMID:The effects of methadone and its role in fatalities. 1537 62
Methadone
continues to be a widely used maintenance therapy for opiate dependence. However, methadone-related deaths have been reported frequently for over 4 decades now. Anoxic brain injury with
pulmonary edema
secondary to respiratory depression is the recognized mechanism of methadone death, although pathological intracranial findings are rarely described in methadone deaths. A selective area of brain injury has never been reported with methadone use. We present a case of a 23-year-old man who had acute necrosis of the bilateral globi pallidi in the brain and systemic rhabdomyolysis after ingesting methadone and nasally insufflating alprazolam. We also present a review of the literature on deaths following opioid use and associated brain injury.
...
PMID:Bilateral acute necrosis of the globi pallidi and rhabdomyolysis due to combined methadone and benzodiazepine toxicity. 2336 Oct 67