buprenorphine has been researched along with Common-Bile-Duct-Diseases* in 2 studies
2 other study(ies) available for buprenorphine and Common-Bile-Duct-Diseases
Article | Year |
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Meperidine misuse in a patient with sphincter of Oddi dysfunction.
To report a seizure occurring secondary to meperidine treatment despite normal renal and central nervous system (CNS) function, and to provide a review of meperidine's role in pain management, including its use in pancreatitis and sphincter of Oddi dysfunction.. A 55-year-old white woman with a history of sphincter of Oddi dysfunction presented to the emergency department with severe abdominal pain. On admission to the hospital, the serum creatinine level was 0.6 mg/dL with slightly elevated aspartate aminotransferase of 56 U/L (normal range 0-31) and alanine aminotransferase of 34 U/L (0-31). The patient received repeated and escalating doses of intravenous meperidine, resulting in a generalized seizure on day 4 of hospitalization. The accumulated meperidine dose was 2125 mg. Buprenorphine was substituted in place of meperidine, and the patient had no further reported complications. She was then transferred to a tertiary-care facility for sphincter of Oddi reevaluation. An objective causality assessment revealed the adverse drug event as probable.. Despite alternative opioids, meperidine continues to be used in pain management. Meperidine is different from other opioids because its active metabolite, normeperidine, is neurotoxic. Patients with renal insufficiency, liver failure, or CNS dysfunction are at increased risk for adverse drug reactions related to normeperidine accumulation. Due to normeperidine's extended half-life, however, accumulation of normeperidine can occur in any patient receiving repeated doses of meperidine.. This case demonstrates the potential hazards that exist when using meperidine in any patient. Meperidine's inherent risks of both undertreating pain and causing adverse drug reactions should prompt clinicians and health organizations to restrict its use in pain management. This restriction should not make exceptions to meperidine's traditional use in pancreatitis or sphincter of Oddi dysfunction. Topics: Analgesics, Opioid; Buprenorphine; Common Bile Duct Diseases; Female; Humans; Meperidine; Middle Aged; Seizures; Sphincter of Oddi | 2003 |
Dilated bile duct in patients receiving narcotic substitution: an early report.
Narcotic substitution is now widely used. Morphine can induce a spasm of the sphincter of Oddi but dilation of bile duct has been reported only in an anecdotal case. In June 1995, we observed a first case of dilation of the common bile duct without organic obstacle in a hepatitis C virus (HCV)-infected patient who was under narcotic substitution, suggesting a causal relationship. We conducted a prospective study to evaluate the precise prevalence of bile duct abnormalities related to narcotic substitution in active intravenous drug or ex-intravenous drug users referred to our liver unit for histologic evaluation of HCV infection. We conducted a prospective study in a 30-month period of 334 HCV-infected patients, including 36 receiving narcotic substitution with methadone or buprenorphine. Biliary tract was analyzed by ultrasonography and by endoscopy ultrasound in cases of bile duct abnormalities. Of the 36 patients under narcotic substitution, 3 (8.3%) had asymptomatic dilated bile duct without organic obstacle--defined as a common bile duct > or =9 mm--compared to 1 of 298 (0.03%; p < 0.001) of those who did not receive substitution. Narcotic substitution may lead to bile duct dilation that does not require invasive diagnosis procedures. Topics: Adult; Bile Duct Diseases; Bile Ducts; Biopsy; Buprenorphine; Common Bile Duct; Common Bile Duct Diseases; Dilatation, Pathologic; Endoscopy; Female; Hepatitis C; HIV Seronegativity; Humans; Liver; Liver Function Tests; Male; Methadone; Middle Aged; Narcotics; Prospective Studies; Substance Abuse, Intravenous; Ultrasonography | 2000 |