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COCAINE 101 for the (E)Medical Student

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... Acidosis Hyperkalemia Ophthalmologic Cerebral vasculitis decreased visual acuity or blindness Numerous other problems Excited/Agitated Delirium Hyperthermia ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: COCAINE 101 for the (E)Medical Student


1
COCAINE 101for the (E)Medical Student
  • Brigham Dastrup, BA
  • March 7, 2006

2
Case 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

3
Differential Diagnosis
  • MI
  • PE
  • Pneumothorax
  • Pneumonia
  • Anxiety
  • Endocarditis
  • Aortic Dissection
  • Wait a minute, I forgot to tell you something. .
    . .

4
The Rest of the Story
  • Which of the following do you use?
  • Tobacco Yes No
  • Alcohol Yes No
  • Drugs Yes No

5
The 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

6
Back to the Differential
  • NSTEMI
  • PE
  • Pneumothorax
  • Pneumonia
  • Anxiety
  • Endocarditis
  • Aortic Dissection
  • Cocaine Chest Pain???
  • First some background. . .

7
Brief 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

8
Brief 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

9
Cocaine 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

10
Cocaine 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

11
Back to Cocaine in the ER
  • Powerful stimulant of the sympathetic NS
  • Signs of Cocaine Use
  • Tachycardia
  • Dilated Pupils
  • Hypertension
  • Hyperthermia
  • Profuse Diaphoresis
  • Agitation

12
ER 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.

13
A 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

14
Cocaine 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

15
Cocaine 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

16
Cocaine 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

17
Polysubstance Abuse
  • Which of the following do you use?
  • Tobacco Yes No
  • Alcohol Yes No
  • Drugs Yes No
  • Cocaine use yesterday, EtOH every day

18
Polysubstance 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

19
Case 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

20
Dedication
21
References
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.
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