Title: COCAINE 101 for the (E)Medical Student
1COCAINE 101for the (E)Medical Student
- Brigham Dastrup, BA
- March 7, 2006
2Case Presentation
- 44yo female with h/o HTN presents with 24 hour
acute exacerbation of chronic substernal chest
pain. Chest pain not exertional. She describes
radiation to her left arm. ()
dyspnea (baseline) (-)Nausea/vomiting, (-)
diaphoresis - Very high blood pressure at outside medical
center - 3 valves are blocked possible CAD
- EKGno changes from previous study
- Cardiac enzymesnegative x3
- Chest X-ray unremarkable
3Differential Diagnosis
- MI
- PE
- Pneumothorax
- Pneumonia
- Anxiety
- Endocarditis
- Aortic Dissection
- Wait a minute, I forgot to tell you something. .
. .
4The Rest of the Story
- Which of the following do you use?
- Tobacco Yes No
- Alcohol Yes No
- Drugs Yes No
5The Rest of the Story
- Which of the following do you use?
- Tobacco Yes No
- Alcohol Yes No
- Drugs Yes No
- Cocaine use yesterday, EtOH every day
6Back to the Differential
- NSTEMI
- PE
- Pneumothorax
- Pneumonia
- Anxiety
- Endocarditis
- Aortic Dissection
- Cocaine Chest Pain???
- First some background. . .
-
7Brief History of Cocaine
- Ancient Incas believed cocaine to be a gift from
the gods - 1884William Halsted performed the first nerve
block using cocaine as the anesthetic, eventually
became dependent - Same yearSigmund Freud publishes article on
cocaine, advocates its use in the treatment of
asthma, wasting diseases and syphilis, also
became dependent
8Brief History of Cocaine
- 1885John Smyth Pemberton registers French Wine
Cola in the US. Popular product contains 60mg
of cocaine
- Later renamed Coca-cola. Contained cocaine until
1903. Coca-cola today still contains an extract
of coca leaves
9Cocaine Terminology for Dummies
- Body packercarefully wraps packages and uses GI
tract as hiding place for drug transport - Body stuffersimilar to packer but done more
quickly (less safely) when faced with police,
etc. - CrackCocaine HCl concentrated by heating the
drug in baking soda until water evaporates name
comes from cracking sound made when heated
10Cocaine Terminology for Dummies
- Cut drugsdrugs mixed with other similar
appearing substances (clinical significance) - Slammed cocainecocaine used IV
- SPEEDBALLheroin injected or snorted followed
immediately by smoking of cocaine
11Back to Cocaine in the ER
- Powerful stimulant of the sympathetic NS
- Signs of Cocaine Use
- Tachycardia
- Dilated Pupils
- Hypertension
- Hyperthermia
- Profuse Diaphoresis
- Agitation
12ER Presentation of Cocaine Use
- Cardiac
- Chest pain -MI
- Arrythmias -Cardiomyopathy
- Vascular (spasms)
- Blindness -Renal Infarction
- Limb Ischemia -Intestinal Ischemia
- Aortic Dissection
- Respiratory
- Pneumothorax
- Pulmonary hemorrhage/infarction
- Diffuse Alveolar Hemorrhage
- Pulmonary Edema
- Asthma Exacerbation
- Eosinophilic Lung Disease etc. etc.
- Neurologic
- CVA -Seizures
- crack dancing extrapyramidal sxs
- Metabolic
- Hyperglycemia - Acidosis
- Hyperkalemia
- Ophthalmologic
- Cerebral vasculitis?decreased visual acuity or
blindness - Numerous other problems
- Excited/Agitated Delirium
- Hyperthermia (45.6C114F!!)
- Etc.etc.etc.
13A few specifics. . .
- Chest PainMost common ER complaint associated
with cocaine use - Dr. Richard Lange study Of patients who come to
the emergency department with nontraumatic chest
pain, 14-25 in urban hospitals. . .have
detectable levels of cocaine or cocaine
metabolites in their blood - Above study cautions that cocaine must be
seriously considered in differential for chest
pain especially in patients with few other risk
factors for atherosclerosis
14Cocaine Chest Pain Challenges
- EKG
- High failure rate in detecting MI (Sens36)
- 43 of cocaine abusers without myocardial
infarction meet EKG criterion for initiation of
reperfusion therapy (ST elev. in 2 contiguous
leads) - Creatine kinase
- Elevated in half of cocaine users who do not have
MI - Troponin more reliable
15Cocaine Chest Pain Treatment
- Nitroglycerin/Verapamilreverse cocaine-induced
HTN and vasoconstriction of coronary arteries - AspirinInhibit Platelet aggregation
- Benzosreduced heart rate, blood pressure, may
attenuate cocaines toxic effects on heart and
nervous system - Phentolaminereverses vasoconstriction of
coronaries
16Cocaine Chest Pain Treatment
- Beta-blockers, best not to use
- Selective beta block leaves alpha1 tone
unopposed, can exacerbate coronary
vasoconstriction - Controversial, some centers use beta blockers
- Thrombolytics
- Reports of catastrophic complications when used
in cocaine users (intraventricular bleed, etc.) - Lange Consider only after treatment with
oxygen, aspirin, nitrates, and benzodiazepenes
has failed
17Polysubstance Abuse
- Which of the following do you use?
- Tobacco Yes No
- Alcohol Yes No
- Drugs Yes No
- Cocaine use yesterday, EtOH every day
18Polysubstance Abuse
- Cocaine with Alcohol
- Metabolism results in the formation of
Cocaethylene - Cocaethylene has similar effects to cocaine and
is - More toxic (cardio)
- More stimulating to sympathetic nervous system
- Has longer half-life (150 minutes vs. 40 minutes)
- Cocaine with Nicotine
- Nicotine increases hypertensive and tachycardic
response - More rapid progression of CAD
- Cocaine with Heroin
- Fatal combination
19Case Report Wait, theres more
- HistoryVague neurologic complaints
- PEgeneralized left sided weakness
- CTeffacement of the posterior right insular
ribbon, possible early sign of stroke - MRIperiventricular and subcortical white matter
disease likely ischemic in nature advanced for
this patient's age
20Dedication
21References
Burnett LB and Adler J. Cocaine. Accessed on
March 3, 2006 at www.emedicine.com/emerg/topic102.
htm Callaway C and Clark RF. Hyperthermia in
psychostimulant overdose. Annals of Emergency
Medicine. 1994 2468-76. Gold MS. Cocaine (and
crack) clinical aspects. In Lowinson JH, et al,
eds. Substance Abuse A Comprehensive Text. 2nd
ed. Baltimore Lippincott, Williams and Wilkins
1992. Hollander JE, Hoffman RS, Gennis P, et al
Prospective multicenter evaluation of
cocaine-associated chest pain. Cocaine Associated
Chest Pain (COCHPA) Study Group. Acad Emerg Med
1994 Jul-Aug 1(4) 330-9. Jones J and Weir W.
Cocaine-Associated Chest Pain. Medical Clinics of
North America. 2005 89(6) 1-13. Lange RA and
Hillis LD. Cardiovascular Complications of
Cocaine Use. New England Journal of Medicine.
2001 345(5) 351-8. Mokhlesi B, et al. Street
Drug Abuse Leading to Critical Illness. Intensive
Care Med. 2004. 301526-36.