heroin and Anthrax

heroin has been researched along with Anthrax* in 23 studies

Reviews

3 review(s) available for heroin and Anthrax

ArticleYear
Clinical Features of Patients Hospitalized for All Routes of Anthrax, 1880-2018: A Systematic Review.
    Clinical infectious diseases : an official publication of the Infectious Diseases Society of America, 2022, 10-17, Volume: 75, Issue:Suppl 3

    Anthrax is a toxin-mediated zoonotic disease caused by Bacillus anthracis, with a worldwide distribution recognized for millennia. Bacillus anthracis is considered a potential biowarfare agent.. We completed a systematic review for clinical and demographic characteristics of adults and children hospitalized with anthrax (cutaneous, inhalation, ingestion, injection [from contaminated heroin], primary meningitis) abstracted from published case reports, case series, and line lists in English from 1880 through 2018, assessing treatment impact by type and severity of disease. We analyzed geographic distribution, route of infection, exposure to anthrax, and incubation period.. Data on 764 adults and 167 children were reviewed. Most cases reported for 1880 through 1915 were from Europe; those for 1916 through 1950 were from North America; and from 1951 on, cases were from Asia. Cutaneous was the most common form of anthrax for all populations. Since 1960, adult anthrax mortality has ranged from 31% for cutaneous to 90% for primary meningitis. Median incubation periods ranged from 1 day (interquartile range [IQR], 0-4) for injection to 7 days (IQR, 4-9) for inhalation anthrax. Most patients with inhalation anthrax developed pleural effusions and more than half with ingestion anthrax developed ascites. Treatment and critical care advances have improved survival for those with systemic symptoms, from approximately 30% in those untreated to approximately 70% in those receiving antimicrobials or antiserum/antitoxin.. This review provides an improved evidence base for both clinical care of individual anthrax patients and public health planning for wide-area aerosol releases of B. anthracis spores.

    Topics: Adult; Aerosols; Anthrax; Antitoxins; Bacillus anthracis; Biological Warfare Agents; Child; Heroin; Humans; Respiratory Tract Infections

2022
Injectional anthrax in human: A new face of the old disease.
    Advances in clinical and experimental medicine : official organ Wroclaw Medical University, 2018, Volume: 27, Issue:4

    Unusual human behavior leads to the emergence of new forms of infectious diseases and new routes of infection. In recent years, a new form of anthrax, called injectional anthrax, emerged and was related to 2 human anthrax outbreaks in Europe. The infection was caused by heroin contaminated with anthrax spores. The new form of anthrax differs from the earlier known "natural" forms of the disease in symptoms, length of the incubation period and recommended treatment. Despite medical treatment, the mortality rate in injectional anthrax is about 35%. This article presents an overview of the forms of anthrax infection in humans, with focus on injectional anthrax syndrome, as well as actual recommendations for treatment, including antibiotic therapy, surgery and possibilities of administering anthrax antitoxin. As a source of contamination of heroin have not been identified and new cases of injectional anthrax might occur again in any country in the future.

    Topics: Anthrax; Bacillus anthracis; Drug Contamination; Drug Users; Heroin; Humans; Soft Tissue Infections; Substance Abuse, Intravenous

2018
Injectional anthrax - new presentation of an old disease.
    Euro surveillance : bulletin Europeen sur les maladies transmissibles = European communicable disease bulletin, 2014, Aug-14, Volume: 19, Issue:32

    Bacillus anthracis infection (anthrax) has three distinct clinical presentations depending on the route of exposure: cutaneous, gastrointestinal and inhalational anthrax. Each of these can lead to secondary bacteraemia and anthrax meningitis. Since 2009,anthrax has emerged among heroin users in Europe,presenting a novel clinical manifestation, 'injectional anthrax', which has been attributed to contaminated heroin distributed throughout Europe; before 2009 only one case was reported. During 2012 and 2013,new cases of injectional anthrax were diagnosed in Denmark, France, Germany, and the United Kingdom.Here we present a comprehensive review of the literature and information derived from different reporting systems until 31 December 2013. Overall 70 confirmed cases were reported, with 26 fatalities (37% case fatality rate).The latest two confirmed cases occurred in March 2013. Thirteen case reports have been published,describing 18 confirmed cases. Sixteen of these presented as a severe soft tissue infection that differed clinically from cutaneous anthrax, lacked the characteristic epidemiological history of animal contact and ten cases required complimentary surgical debridement. These unfamiliar characteristics have led to delays of three to 12 days in diagnosis, inadequate treatment and a high fatality rate. Clinicians' awareness of this recently described clinical entity is key for early 'and successful management of patients.

    Topics: Anthrax; Bacillus anthracis; Disease Outbreaks; Heroin; Humans; Male; Spain; Substance Abuse, Intravenous

2014

Other Studies

20 other study(ies) available for heroin and Anthrax

ArticleYear
Characterization of Bacillus anthracis replication and persistence on environmental substrates associated with wildlife anthrax outbreaks.
    PloS one, 2022, Volume: 17, Issue:9

    Anthrax is a zoonosis caused by the environmentally maintained, spore-forming bacterium Bacillus anthracis, affecting humans, livestock, and wildlife nearly worldwide. Bacterial spores are ingested, inhaled, and may be mechanically transmitted by biting insects or injection as occurs during heroin-associated human cases. Herbivorous hoofstock are very susceptible to anthrax. When these hosts die of anthrax, a localized infectious zone (LIZ) forms in the area surrounding the carcass as it is scavenged and decomposes, where viable populations of vegetative B. anthracis and spores contaminate the environment. In many settings, necrophagous flies contaminate the outer carcass, surrounding soils, and vegetation with viable pathogen while scavenging. Field observations in Texas have confirmed this process and identified primary browse species (e.g., persimmon) are contaminated. However, there are limited data available on B. anthracis survival on environmental substrates immediately following host death at a LIZ. Toward this, we simulated fly contamination by inoculating live-attenuated, fully virulent laboratory-adapted, and fully virulent wild B. anthracis strains on untreated leaves and rocks for 2, 5, and 7 days. At each time point after inoculation, the number of vegetative cells and spores were determined. Sporulation rates were extracted from these different time points to enable comparison of sporulation speeds between B. anthracis strains with different natural histories. We found all B. anthracis strains used in this study could multiply for 2 or more days post inoculation and persist on leaves and rocks for at least seven days with variation by strain. We found differences in sporulation rates between laboratory-adapted strains and wild isolates, with the live-attenuated strain sporulating fastest, followed by the wild isolates, then laboratory-adapted virulent strains. Extrapolating our wild strain lab results to potential contamination, a single blow fly may contaminate leaves with up to 8.62 x 105 spores per day and a single carcass may host thousands of flies. Replication outside of the carcass and rapid sporulation confirms the LIZ extends beyond the carcass for several days after formation and supports the necrophagous fly transmission pathway for amplifying cases during an outbreak. We note caution must be taken when extrapolating replication and sporulation rates from live-attenuated and laboratory-adapted strains of B. anthracis.

    Topics: Animals; Animals, Wild; Anthrax; Bacillus anthracis; Diptera; Disease Outbreaks; Heroin; Humans; Soil; Spores, Bacterial

2022
Analysis of Anthrax Immune Globulin Intravenous with Antimicrobial Treatment in Injection Drug Users, Scotland, 2009-2010.
    Emerging infectious diseases, 2017, Volume: 23, Issue:1

    We studied anthrax immune globulin intravenous (AIG-IV) use from a 2009-2010 outbreak of Bacillus anthracis soft tissue infection in injection drug users in Scotland, UK, and we compared findings from 15 AIG-IV recipients with findings from 28 nonrecipients. Death rates did not differ significantly between recipients and nonrecipients (33% vs. 21%). However, whereas only 8 (27%) of 30 patients at low risk for death (admission sequential organ failure assessment score of 0-5) received AIG-IV, 7 (54%) of the 13 patients at high risk for death (sequential organ failure assessment score of 6-11) received treatment. AIG-IV recipients had surgery more often and, among survivors, had longer hospital stays than did nonrecipients. AIG-IV recipients were sicker than nonrecipients. This difference and the small number of higher risk patients confound assessment of AIG-IV effectiveness in this outbreak.

    Topics: Adult; Anthrax; Anti-Bacterial Agents; Antitoxins; Bacillus anthracis; Disease Outbreaks; Drug Therapy, Combination; Drug Users; Female; Heroin; Humans; Immunoglobulin G; Male; Scotland; Soft Tissue Infections; Substance Abuse, Intravenous; Survival Analysis; Treatment Outcome

2017
Anthrax in injecting drug users: the need for increased vigilance in the clinic.
    Expert review of anti-infective therapy, 2015, Volume: 13, Issue:6

    The emergence of a previously unrecognized route of Bacillus anthracis infection over the last few years has led to concern: sporadic anthrax outbreaks among heroin users in northern Europe have demonstrated the severe pathology associated with the newly described 'injectional anthrax'. With a high case fatality rate and non-specific early symptoms, this is a novel clinical manifestation of an old disease. Lack of awareness of this syndrome among emergency room clinicians can lead to a delayed diagnosis among heroin users; indeed, for many health workers in developed countries, where infection by B. anthracis is rare, this may be the first time they have encountered anthrax infections. As the putative route of contamination of the heroin supply is potentially ongoing, it is important that clinicians and public health workers remain vigilant for early signs of injectional anthrax.

    Topics: Anthrax; Bacillus anthracis; Delayed Diagnosis; Disease Outbreaks; Drug Contamination; Drug Users; Europe; Heroin; Humans; Substance Abuse, Intravenous

2015
Injectional anthrax in heroin users, Europe, 2000-2012.
    Emerging infectious diseases, 2014, Volume: 20, Issue:2

    Topics: Anthrax; Bacillus anthracis; Bacterial Typing Techniques; DNA, Bacterial; Europe; Heroin; Humans; Phylogeny; Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide; Substance-Related Disorders

2014
Severe systemic Bacillus anthracis infection in an intravenous drug user.
    BMJ case reports, 2014, Feb-13, Volume: 2014

    There has recently been an outbreak of injectional anthrax infection secondary to contaminated heroin use in the UK and Europe. We present a case of a 37-year-old man presenting with pain and swelling in the groin following injection of heroin into the area. He was initially treated for severe cellulitis, however, he failed to respond to appropriate antimicrobial therapy. He went onto develop a widespread rash; it was then that a diagnosis of injectional anthrax infection was considered. Appropriate investigations were initiated including serum sample and tissue biopsy, and the diagnosis was confirmed. Management included extensive surgical debridement and a prolonged course of combination antibiotic therapy. The authors summarise the important steps in diagnosis and the management options in patients presenting with this life-threatening infection.

    Topics: Adult; Anthrax; Bacillus anthracis; Drug Contamination; Heroin; Humans; Illicit Drugs; Male; Soft Tissue Infections; Substance Abuse, Intravenous

2014
Lessons for control of heroin-associated anthrax in Europe from 2009-2010 outbreak case studies, London, UK.
    Emerging infectious diseases, 2014, Volume: 20, Issue:7

    Outbreaks of serious infections associated with heroin use in persons who inject drugs (PWIDs) occur intermittently and require vigilance and rapid reporting of individual cases. Here, we give a firsthand account of the cases in London during an outbreak of heroin-associated anthrax during 2009-2010 in the United Kingdom. This new manifestation of anthrax has resulted in a clinical manifestation distinct from already recognized forms. During 2012-13, additional cases of heroin-associated anthrax among PWIDs in England and other European countries were reported, suggesting that anthrax-contaminated heroin remains in circulation. Antibacterial drugs used for serious soft tissue infection are effective against anthrax, which may lead to substantial underrecognition of this novel illness. The outbreak in London provides a strong case for ongoing vigilance and the use of serologic testing in diagnosis and serologic surveillance schemes to determine and monitor the prevalence of anthrax exposure in the PWID community.

    Topics: Adult; Anthrax; Anti-Bacterial Agents; Bacillus anthracis; Disease Outbreaks; Female; Heroin; Humans; London; Male; Middle Aged; Soft Tissue Infections

2014
Anthrax among heroin users in Europe possibly caused by same Bacillus anthracis strain since 2000.
    Euro surveillance : bulletin Europeen sur les maladies transmissibles = European communicable disease bulletin, 2013, Mar-28, Volume: 18, Issue:13

    Injection anthrax was described first in 2000 in a heroin-injecting drug user in Norway. New anthrax cases among heroin consumers were detected in the United Kingdom (52 cases) and Germany (3 cases) in 2009-10. In June 2012, a fatal case occurred in Regensburg, Bavaria. As of December 2012, 13 cases had been reported in this new outbreak from Germany, Denmark, France and the United Kingdom. We analysed isolates from 2009-10 and 2012 as well as from the first injection anthrax case in Norway in 2000 by comparative molecular typing using a high resolution 31 marker multilocus variable-number tandem repeat analysis (MLVA) and a broad single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) analysis. Our results show that all cases may be traced back to the same outbreak strain. They also indicate the probability of a single source contaminating heroin and that the outbreak could have lasted for at least a decade. However, an additional serological pilot study in two German regions conducted in 2011 failed to discover additional anthrax cases among 288 heroin users.

    Topics: Anthrax; Antigens, Bacterial; Bacillus anthracis; Bacterial Toxins; Bacterial Typing Techniques; Biomarkers; Blotting, Western; Disease Outbreaks; Drug Contamination; Europe; Heroin; Humans; Male; Microbial Sensitivity Tests; Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide; Sensitivity and Specificity; Substance Abuse, Intravenous

2013
Two anthrax cases with soft tissue infection, severe oedema and sepsis in Danish heroin users.
    BMC infectious diseases, 2013, Sep-03, Volume: 13

    Anthrax had become extremely rare in Europe, but in 2010 an outbreak of anthrax among heroin users in Scotland increased awareness of contaminated heroin as a source of anthrax. We present the first two Danish cases of injectional anthrax and discuss the clinical presentations, which included both typical and more unusual manifestations.. The first patient, a 55-year old man with HIV and hepatitis C virus co-infection, presented with severe pain in the right thigh and lower abdomen after injecting heroin into the right groin. Computed tomography and ultrasonographic examination of the abdomen and right thigh showed oedematous thickened peritoneum, distended oedematous mesentery and subcutaneous oedema of the right thigh. At admission the patient was afebrile but within 24 hours he progressed to severe septic shock and abdominal compartment syndrome. Cultures of blood and intraperitoneal fluid grew Bacillus anthracis. The patient was treated with meropenem, clindamycin, ciprofloxacin and metronidazole. Despite maximum supportive care including mechanical ventilation, vasopressor treatment and continuous veno-venous hemodiafiltration the patient died on day four.The second patient, a 39-year old man with chronic hepatitis C virus infection, presented with fever and a swollen right arm after injecting heroin into his right arm. The arm was swollen from the axilla to the wrist with tense and discoloured skin. He was initially septic with low blood pressure but responded to crystalloids. During the first week, swelling progressed and the patient developed massive generalised oedema with a weight gain of 40 kg. When blood cultures grew Bacillus anthracis antibiotic treatment was changed to meropenem, moxifloxacin and metronidazole, and on day 7 hydroxycloroquin was added. The patient responded to treatment and was discharged after 29 days.. These two heroin-associated anthrax cases from Denmark corroborate that heroin contaminated with anthrax spores may be a continuous source of injectional anthrax across Europe. Clinicians and clinical microbiologists need to stay vigilant and suspect anthrax in patients with a history of heroin use who present with soft tissue or generalised infection. Marked swelling of affected soft tissue or unusual intra-abdominal oedema should strengthen clinical suspicion.

    Topics: Adult; Anthrax; Bacillus anthracis; Denmark; Drug Contamination; Edema; Heroin; Humans; Male; Middle Aged; Sepsis; Soft Tissue Infections; Substance Abuse, Intravenous

2013
Infections with spore-forming bacteria in persons who inject drugs, 2000-2009.
    Emerging infectious diseases, 2013, Volume: 19, Issue:1

    Since 2000 in the United Kingdom, infections caused by spore-forming bacteria have been associated with increasing illness and death among persons who inject drugs (PWID). To assess temporal and geographic trends in these illnesses (botulism, tetanus, Clostridium novyi infection, and anthrax), we compared rates across England and Scotland for 2000-2009. Overall, 295 infections were reported: 1.45 per 1,000 PWID in England and 4.01 per 1,000 PWID in Scotland. The higher rate in Scotland was mainly attributable to C. novyi infection and anthrax; rates of botulism and tetanus were comparable in both countries. The temporal and geographic clustering of cases of C. novyi and anthrax into outbreaks suggests possible contamination of specific heroin batches; in contrast, the more sporadic nature of tetanus and botulism cases suggests that these spores might more commonly exist in the drug supply or local environment although at varying levels. PWID should be advised about treatment programs, injecting hygiene, risks, and vaccinations.

    Topics: Adult; Anthrax; Bacillus anthracis; Botulism; Clostridium; Clostridium botulinum; Clostridium Infections; Clostridium tetani; Disease Outbreaks; Drug Contamination; England; Female; Heroin; Humans; Incidence; Male; Scotland; Spores, Bacterial; Substance Abuse, Intravenous; Tetanus

2013
Fatal cutaneous anthrax in a heroin user.
    The Journal of laryngology and otology, 2013, Volume: 127, Issue:4

    Cutaneous anthrax usually has a mortality rate of less than 1 per cent. However, since December 2009 there have been more than 13 deaths in the UK due to anthrax-contaminated heroin. We therefore wish to raise clinical awareness of this treatable disease.. We describe the case of a heroin user with an equivocal presentation of cellulitis in the neck. Within 36 hours, this led to death due to cutaneous anthrax.. Whilst cutaneous anthrax remains rare, this case report aims to raise awareness of the fact that the symptoms and signs of this condition in intravenous drug users may not always fit the typical picture.

    Topics: Adult; Anthrax; Bacillus anthracis; Cellulitis; Heroin; Humans; Male; Skin Diseases, Bacterial; Substance Abuse, Intravenous

2013
Anthrax infection among heroin users in Scotland during 2009-2010: a case-control study by linkage to a national drug treatment database.
    Clinical infectious diseases : an official publication of the Infectious Diseases Society of America, 2012, Volume: 55, Issue:5

    Using a data-linkage approach, we conducted a case-control study to investigate risk factors in an outbreak of anthrax infection among Scottish heroin users. Factors associated with an increased risk of infection included longer injecting history, receiving opioid substitution therapy, and alcohol consumption. Smoking heroin was associated with lower risk of infection.

    Topics: Adult; Anthrax; Case-Control Studies; Databases, Factual; Disease Outbreaks; Drug Users; Female; Heroin; Humans; Male; Multivariate Analysis; Risk Factors; Scotland; Substance Abuse, Intravenous

2012
Fatal anthrax infection in a heroin user from southern Germany, June 2012.
    Euro surveillance : bulletin Europeen sur les maladies transmissibles = European communicable disease bulletin, 2012, Jun-28, Volume: 17, Issue:26

    Blood cultures from a heroin user who died in June 2012, a few hours after hospital admission, due to acute septic disease, revealed the presence of Bacillus anthracis. This report describes the extended diagnosis by MALDI-TOF and real-time PCR and rapid confirmation of the anthrax infection through reference laboratories. Physicians and diagnostic laboratories were informed and alerted efficiently through the reporting channels of German public health institutions, which is essential for the prevention of further cases.

    Topics: Anthrax; Bacillus anthracis; Bacteremia; Drug Contamination; Drug Users; Fatal Outcome; Genome, Bacterial; Germany; Heroin; Humans; Male; Middle Aged; Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction; Sepsis; Substance Abuse, Intravenous

2012
Molecular epidemiologic investigation of an anthrax outbreak among heroin users, Europe.
    Emerging infectious diseases, 2012, Volume: 18, Issue:8

    In December 2009, two unusual cases of anthrax were diagnosed in heroin users in Scotland. A subsequent anthrax outbreak in heroin users emerged throughout Scotland and expanded into England and Germany, sparking concern of nefarious introduction of anthrax spores into the heroin supply. To better understand the outbreak origin, we used established genetic signatures that provided insights about strain origin. Next, we sequenced the whole genome of a representative Bacillus anthracis strain from a heroin user (Ba4599), developed Ba4599-specific single-nucleotide polymorphism assays, and genotyped all available material from other heroin users with anthrax. Of 34 case-patients with B. anthracis-positive PCR results, all shared the Ba4599 single-nucleotide polymorphism genotype. Phylogeographic analysis demonstrated that Ba4599 was closely related to strains from Turkey and not to previously identified isolates from Scotland or Afghanistan, the presumed origin of the heroin. Our results suggest accidental contamination along the drug trafficking route through a cutting agent or animal hides used to smuggle heroin into Europe.

    Topics: Anthrax; Bacillus anthracis; Bacterial Typing Techniques; Disease Outbreaks; DNA, Bacterial; Europe; Female; Genome, Bacterial; Genotype; Heroin; Humans; Male; Molecular Epidemiology; Phylogeny; Polymerase Chain Reaction; Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide; Sequence Analysis, DNA; Substance Abuse, Intravenous

2012
Draft genome sequence of Bacillus anthracis UR-1, isolated from a German heroin user.
    Journal of bacteriology, 2012, Volume: 194, Issue:21

    We report the draft genome sequence of Bacillus anthracis UR-1, isolated from a fatal case of injectional anthrax in a German heroin user. Analysis of the genome sequence of strain UR-1 may aid in describing phylogenetic relationships between virulent heroin-associated isolates of B. anthracis isolated in the United Kingdom, Germany, and other European countries.

    Topics: Anthrax; Bacillus anthracis; DNA, Bacterial; Genome, Bacterial; Germany; Heroin; Molecular Sequence Data; Sequence Analysis, DNA; Substance Abuse, Intravenous

2012
A case of septicaemic anthrax in an intravenous drug user.
    BMC infectious diseases, 2011, Jan-20, Volume: 11

    In 2000, Ringertz et al described the first case of systemic anthrax caused by injecting heroin contaminated with anthrax. In 2008, there were 574 drug related deaths in Scotland, of which 336 were associated with heroin and or morphine. We report a rare case of septicaemic anthrax caused by injecting heroin contaminated with anthrax in Scotland.. A 32 year old intravenous drug user (IVDU), presented with a 12 hour history of increasing purulent discharge from a chronic sinus in his left groin. He had a tachycardia, pyrexia, leukocytosis and an elevated C-reactive protein (CRP). He was treated with Vancomycin, Clindamycin, Ciprofloxacin, Gentamicin and Metronidazole. Blood cultures grew Bacillus anthracis within 24 hours of presentation. He had a computed tomography (CT) scan and magnetic resonance imagining (MRI) of his abdomen, pelvis and thighs performed. These showed inflammatory change relating to the iliopsoas and an area of necrosis in the adductor magnus.He underwent an exploration of his left thigh. This revealed chronically indurated subcutaneous tissues with no evidence of a collection or necrotic muscle. Treatment with Vancomycin, Ciprofloxacin and Clindamycin continued for 14 days. Negative Pressure Wound Therapy (NPWT) device was applied utilising the Venturiā„¢ wound sealing kit. Following 4 weeks of treatment, the wound dimensions had reduced by 77%.. Although systemic anthrax infection is rare, it should be considered when faced with severe cutaneous infection in IVDU patients. This case shows that patients with significant bacteraemia may present with no signs of haemodynamic compromise. Prompt recognition and treatment with high dose IV antimicrobial therapy increases the likelihood of survival. The use of simple wound therapy adjuncts such as NPWT can give excellent wound healing results.

    Topics: Adult; Anthrax; Bacillus anthracis; Bacteremia; Drug Contamination; Drug Users; Heroin; Humans; Male; Substance Abuse, Intravenous

2011
An unusual case of peritonitis in an intravenous drug user.
    Gastroenterology, 2011, Volume: 141, Issue:2

    Topics: Abdomen, Acute; Adult; Anthrax; Bacillus anthracis; Drug Contamination; Fatal Outcome; Heroin; Humans; Male; Peritonitis; Radiography; Substance Abuse, Intravenous; Young Adult

2011
An outbreak of infection with Bacillus anthracis in injecting drug users in Scotland.
    Euro surveillance : bulletin Europeen sur les maladies transmissibles = European communicable disease bulletin, 2010, Jan-14, Volume: 15, Issue:2

    An investigation is currently underway to explore and control an outbreak of Bacillus anthracis among drug users (mainly injecting) in Scotland. Contaminated heroin or a contaminated cutting agent mixed with the heroin is considered to be the most likely source and vehicle of infection. Heroin users have been advised of the risk. The risk to the general public is regarded as very low.

    Topics: Adult; Anthrax; Bacillus anthracis; Disease Outbreaks; Female; Heroin; Humans; Male; Middle Aged; Population Surveillance; Scotland; Substance Abuse, Intravenous

2010
Heroin contaminated with anthrax has killed 11 people.
    BMJ (Clinical research ed.), 2010, Feb-15, Volume: 340

    Topics: Anthrax; Drug Contamination; Germany; Heroin; Heroin Dependence; Humans; Narcotics; United Kingdom

2010
Deaths among heroin users present a puzzle.
    Science (New York, N.Y.), 2000, Jun-16, Volume: 288, Issue:5473

    Topics: Anthrax; Bacillus anthracis; Cause of Death; Clostridium; Clostridium Infections; Drug Contamination; Heroin; Heroin Dependence; Humans; Ireland; Spores, Bacterial; United Kingdom

2000
Injectional anthrax in a heroin skin-popper.
    Lancet (London, England), 2000, Nov-04, Volume: 356, Issue:9241

    Anthrax is rare in western Europe but may arise sporadically in people exposed to animal products from endemic areas. A heroin-injecting drug user presented with a severe soft-tissue infection at the injection site, septic shock, and meningitis. A gram-positive endospore-forming aerobic rod was isolated from the soft tissue and cerebrospinal fluid; confirmation of Bacillus anthracis was made by PCR. Since contaminated heroin was the probable source of infection, this case is of concern and warrants surveillance.

    Topics: Anthrax; Bacillus anthracis; Brain; Drug Contamination; Fatal Outcome; Heroin; Humans; Male; Middle Aged; Norway; Polymerase Chain Reaction; Substance Abuse, Intravenous

2000