heroin has been researched along with Wounds-and-Injuries* in 8 studies
8 other study(ies) available for heroin and Wounds-and-Injuries
Article | Year |
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Nested graft for chronic ulcer in scar tissue after heroin extravasation in a drug addict.
Nested graft is a surgical technique that allows to manage difficult-to-treat medical conditions such as chronic cutaneous ulcers, thanks to the high efficacy it has in reverting the fibroblasts senescence. Because of its peculiar regenerative property, nested graft is a surgical technique suitable also for the treatment of cutaneous ulcers developing on fibrotic scar tissue.. We reported the case of a 45-year-old man, drug-addict, with a large ulcer on the back of the right forearm in the context of scar fibrotic tissue. This lesion resulted from a previous heroin extravasation treated with a dermo-epidermal skin graft, that was accidentally scratched away by mechanical trauma. After several therapeutic failures with topical medications, we decided to treat the ulcer performing a skin graft using the nested graft technique. No adverse events were reported by the patient during or after the surgery. At the clinical evaluation performed three years later the wound was completely healed.. Nested graft represents a safe and easy-to-use technique that can be successfully used to treat ulcers on scar tissue, ensuring the achievement and the long-term maintenance of optimal resistance and aesthetic results. Topics: Chronic Disease; Cicatrix; Heroin; Humans; Male; Middle Aged; Pressure Ulcer; Skin Transplantation; Substance-Related Disorders; Wounds and Injuries | 2021 |
Trauma Severity in Early Childhood Correlates with Stress and Satiety Hormone Levels in a Pilot Cohort Receiving Diamorphine Maintenance Treatment.
Childhood trauma is of importance for the manifestation of substance-related disorders and maintenance of hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA)-axis disorders. Since stress plays a crucial role in opioid compliance and craving, we investigated the immediate effects of diacetylmorphine application on the HPA axis. In particular, adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) and cortisol secretion, as well as satiety regulating proopiomelanocortin peptides α-melanocyte-stimulating hormone (MSH) and β-endorphin (END) in a cohort of opioid-dependent patients in diamorphine maintenance treatment concerning the clinical severity of their childhood trauma.. We compared the serum levels of ACTH, cortisol, MSH, and END in 15 opioid-dependent patients. All participants received treatment with diamorphine and were observed at 5 timepoints before and after injection. We split the cohort into 2 subgroups concerning childhood trauma measured by the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire.. Splitting in 2 subgroups for mild (5) and severe trauma (10), we found that while both groups show a significant reduction of ACTH and cortisol levels over time, slopes display different progressions over time for cortisol (F[1.6] = 9.38, p = 0.02), while remaining identical for ACTH (F[1.6] = 1.69, p = 0.24). Also, levels of both MSH and END were significantly lower in severely traumatized patients.. For the first time, we present a detailed representation of stress- and addiction-related proteins for the first 5 h after diamorphine application, demonstrating the interrelationship between stress hormones and childhood trauma as well as its potential effects on the progression of addictions such as opioid dependence. Topics: Adrenocorticotropic Hormone; Adult; Adverse Childhood Experiences; beta-Endorphin; Child; Cohort Studies; Female; Heroin; Heroin Dependence; Humans; Hydrocortisone; Hypothalamo-Hypophyseal System; Male; Middle Aged; Pituitary-Adrenal System; Stress, Psychological; Surveys and Questionnaires; Wounds and Injuries | 2020 |
Intranasal diamorphine in children with trauma.
This article discusses the administration of intranasal diamorphine as an analgesia-in paediatric trauma care. The authors outline evidence for its use and discuss a recent multicentre safety study of an intranasal diamorphine product. In addition, they advise emergency department nurses on administering the analgesia, and offer guidelines for determining patient suitability and post-administration assessment. Topics: Administration, Intranasal; Adolescent; Algorithms; Analgesics, Opioid; Child; Child, Preschool; Heroin; Humans; Nasal Sprays; Pain Management; Pain Measurement; Wounds and Injuries | 2013 |
Concentrations of alprazolam in blood from impaired drivers and forensic autopsies were not much different but showed a high prevalence of co-ingested illicit drugs.
Alprazolam is a benzodiazepine anxiolytic widely prescribed for treatment of panic-disorder and social phobias, although this medication is also subject to abuse. In this paper, the concentrations of alprazolam in venous blood samples from impaired drivers were compared with femoral blood samples from forensic autopsies classified as intoxication or other causes of death (e.g. natural, trauma). After liquid-liquid extraction (n-butyl acetate) alprazolam was determined in blood by capillary gas chromatography with a nitrogen-phosphorous detector. The mean (median) and range of alprazolam concentrations in blood from impaired drivers (n = 773) were 0.08 mg/L (0.05 mg/L) and 0.02-3.9 mg/L, respectively. Many traffic offenders had co-ingested ethanol (13%), amphetamine (46%), cannabis (32%), or heroin (14%), as well as other drugs. In deaths attributed to drug intoxication, the mean (median) and range of alprazolam concentrations in blood (n = 438) were 0.10 mg/L (0.06 mg/L) and 0.02-1.6 mg/L, respectively, which were not much different from other causes of death (n = 278); 0.08 mg/L (0.05 mg/L) and 0.02-0.9 mg/L. Median concentrations of alprazolam in blood from living and deceased persons did not seem to depend on the number of co-ingested substances. The result of this pharmacoepidemiological study suggests that alprazolam is a fairly innocent drug when used as monotherapy, but toxicity problems arise when co-ingested with illicit drugs and/or psychoactive medication. Topics: Age Factors; Alcoholism; Alprazolam; Amphetamine; Anti-Anxiety Agents; Automobile Driving; Crime; Databases, Factual; Female; Forensic Toxicology; Heroin; Humans; Illicit Drugs; Male; Marijuana Abuse; Psychotropic Drugs; Substance Abuse Detection; Substance-Related Disorders; Sweden; Wounds and Injuries | 2013 |
The impact of street drugs on trauma care.
The use of illicit drugs, specifically heroin and cocaine, complicates trauma patient management and consumes extensive hospital resources. This paper focuses on heroin- and cocaine-related injuries observed by physicians at Detroit Receiving Hospital, a large urban Level I trauma center. The pharmaceutical effects, mode of administration, and the manner in which these drugs affect diagnosis and treatment of injuries are documented and discussed. Specific drug-related complications associated with overdose, soft-tissue infections, bacterial endocarditis (therapy resistant), vascular thromboses, vascular aneurysms, vasoconstriction, stroke, cardiac arrhythmias, muscle ischemia, and solid-organ abscesses are also analyzed. Illicit drug use significantly complicates initial diagnosis and trauma management and is associated with severe adverse pathophysiologic effects. Currently, prevention efforts, such as interventions in trauma centers, should be considered as the most efficient and feasible way to prevent injury recidivism in this patient population. We also conclude that legislative change may be the answer in reducing or preventing the horrendous problems caused by illicit drugs. Topics: Cocaine; Cocaine-Related Disorders; Disease; Heroin; Heroin Dependence; Humans; Illicit Drugs; Patient Care; Wounds and Injuries | 2005 |
[How to distinguish between illness, injury or intoxication in the emergency unit?].
Clinical judgement of intoxicated patients is difficult. In the emergency department of the inner city of Oslo this is done every day.. During a one-year period from 1998-99, a group of 429 first-time admitted intoxicated patients were included in a study. The patients and the method of observation are described.. 75% of the patients were men; 45% reported to have consumed alcohol only, while 10% had taken a heroin overdose. The rest had used various combinations of legal and illegal drugs. Female patients were younger than male patients (29 versus 36 years, p < 0.00), and patients intoxicated only on alcohol were on the average older than patients who had taken drugs (38 versus 31 years, p < 0.00). 57 patients were hospitalized, seven of them had serious intracerebral conditions.. Our study indicates that systematic observation over some hours, repeated clinical examinations, and the systematic use of a modified Glasgow Coma Scale makes it possible to sort out the seriously ill from "only" intoxicated patients. Topics: Adult; Alcoholic Intoxication; Critical Illness; Diagnosis, Differential; Drug Overdose; Emergency Service, Hospital; Female; Glasgow Coma Scale; Heroin; Heroin Dependence; Humans; Male; Monitoring, Physiologic; Norway; Poisoning; Substance-Related Disorders; Wounds and Injuries | 2001 |
Wound botulism in an injecting drug user in London.
Topics: Adult; Botulism; Female; Heroin; Humans; London; Risk Assessment; Substance Abuse, Intravenous; Wounds and Injuries | 2000 |
Liver stores of vitamin A in a normal population dying suddenly or rapidly from unnatural causes in New York City.
Topics: Adolescent; Adult; Age Factors; Aged; Child; Child, Preschool; Death, Sudden; Heroin; Humans; Infant; Liver; Middle Aged; New York City; Racial Groups; Vitamin A; Wounds and Injuries; Wounds, Gunshot | 1970 |