1. Clinical relevance of ethanol coingestion in patients with GHB/GBL intoxication.
- Author
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Galicia M, Dargan PI, Dines AM, Yates C, Heyerdahl F, Hovda KE, Giraudon I, Wood DM, and Miró Ò
- Subjects
- Adult, Aggression drug effects, Alcohol Drinking psychology, Consciousness drug effects, Consciousness Disorders diagnosis, Consciousness Disorders psychology, Consciousness Disorders therapy, Emergency Service, Hospital, Europe, Female, Humans, Intensive Care Units, Length of Stay, Male, Patient Admission, Registries, Risk Factors, Time Factors, Young Adult, 4-Butyrolactone adverse effects, Alcohol Drinking adverse effects, Consciousness Disorders etiology, Ethanol adverse effects, Illicit Drugs adverse effects, Sodium Oxybate adverse effects, Substance-Related Disorders complications
- Abstract
Objective: Ethanol intake can increase the sedative effects of gamma-hydroxybutyrate/gamma-butyrolactone (GHB/GBL), although the real clinical impact is unknown. We studied the clinical impact of the co-ingestion of ethanol in patients presenting to the Emergency Department (ED) with acute toxicity related to GHB/GBL use., Method: We performed a secondary analysis of the Euro-DEN Plus Registry (14 countries, 22 EDs) which includes 17,371 consecutive patients presenting to the ED with acute recreational drug toxicity over 39 consecutive months (October 2013 - December 2016). We compared the epidemiological and clinical characteristics and ED management of patients identified as presenting with acute toxicity related to lone GHB/GBL (Group A) or GHB/GBL combined with ethanol (Group B) without other concomitant drugs., Results: A total of 609 patients were included (age 32 (8) years; 116 women (19%); Group A: 183 patients and Group B: 426). The most common features were reduction in consciousness (defined as Glasgow Coma Score <13 points: 56.1%) and agitation/aggressiveness (33.6%). Those with ethanol co-ingestion were younger patients (Group A/B: 31.5/33.1 years, p = 0.029) and ethanol co-ingestion was associated with a lower frequency of bradycardia (23.5%/15.7%, p = 0.027) and more frequent arrival at the ED by ambulance (68.3/86.6%; p < 0.001), reduction in consciousness (58.9%/49.1%; p = 0.031), need for treatment in the ED (49.2%/60.4%; p = 0.011), use of sedatives (20.1%/12.8%; p = 0.034), admission to critical care units (22.4%/55.3%; p < 0.001), and longer hospital stay (stay longer than 6 h: 16.9%/28.4%; p = 0.003)., Conclusions: Co-ingestion of ethanol increases the adverse effects of patients intoxicated by GHB/GBL, leading to greater depression of consciousness, need for treatment, admission to the ICU and longer hospital stay., (Copyright © 2019 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2019
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