• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 4
  • 2
  • 1
  • Tagged with
  • 11
  • 11
  • 6
  • 6
  • 5
  • 4
  • 4
  • 4
  • 3
  • 3
  • 3
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Influencing Factors on Methadone Pharmacology: Impact on Satisfaction with Methadone Maintenance Treatment

Elkader, Alexander 24 September 2009 (has links)
The methadone maintenance treatment population suffers from high rates of comorbid psychiatric and substance use disorders. Despite a more than 40-year treatment history, not all patients are satisfied with methadone treatment and more than half of the patients complain of significant inter-dose withdrawal at least some of the time. The objectives of this research were to investigate the pharmacological response to methadone under the influence of comorbid major depressive disorder and smoking; and to identify factors other than physical withdrawal symptoms that can differentiate patients based on their complaints of dissatisfaction with treatment. In Study 1, seven depressed methadone maintenance patients experienced more opioid withdrawal symptomatology over a 24-hour methadone-dosing interval than 10 nondepressed methadone patients. Depression severity was significantly correlated with trough opioid withdrawal severity. This suggests that depression or depressive symptoms are related to reported opioid withdrawal. In Study 2, many factors other than physical opioid withdrawal symptoms were able to differentiate patients who were satisfied with treatment (holders, n=25), partially satisfied with treatment (partial holders, n=35), and not satisfied with treatment(nonholders, n=30). Results suggested that these patient satisfaction groups cluster differently depending on physical opioid withdrawal, mood, psychological distress, and personality. Nonholders experienced more physical withdrawal symptoms, craving for opioids, and negative drug effects. Holders had less psychological distress and experienced less negative mood states than the other groups. Partial holders had less agreeable personalities compared to patients in the other groups. In Study 3, opioid and nicotine withdrawal symptoms and effects were measured in 40 methadone-maintained patients who were current smokers during trough and peak methadone effects, both pre and post-nicotine administration. Cigarette smoking enhanced opioid withdrawal suppression during the peak methadone condition, methadone attenuated nicotine withdrawal, and methadone and nicotine shared many of the same main effects, suggesting that smoking and methadone effects may be inseparable dimensions. In summary, the results of these studies suggest that in addition to physical symptoms, mood related factors are important to opioid withdrawal perception and that the mood factors and drug interactions can impact on a patient’s perception of satisfaction with methadone treatment.
2

Influencing Factors on Methadone Pharmacology: Impact on Satisfaction with Methadone Maintenance Treatment

Elkader, Alexander 24 September 2009 (has links)
The methadone maintenance treatment population suffers from high rates of comorbid psychiatric and substance use disorders. Despite a more than 40-year treatment history, not all patients are satisfied with methadone treatment and more than half of the patients complain of significant inter-dose withdrawal at least some of the time. The objectives of this research were to investigate the pharmacological response to methadone under the influence of comorbid major depressive disorder and smoking; and to identify factors other than physical withdrawal symptoms that can differentiate patients based on their complaints of dissatisfaction with treatment. In Study 1, seven depressed methadone maintenance patients experienced more opioid withdrawal symptomatology over a 24-hour methadone-dosing interval than 10 nondepressed methadone patients. Depression severity was significantly correlated with trough opioid withdrawal severity. This suggests that depression or depressive symptoms are related to reported opioid withdrawal. In Study 2, many factors other than physical opioid withdrawal symptoms were able to differentiate patients who were satisfied with treatment (holders, n=25), partially satisfied with treatment (partial holders, n=35), and not satisfied with treatment(nonholders, n=30). Results suggested that these patient satisfaction groups cluster differently depending on physical opioid withdrawal, mood, psychological distress, and personality. Nonholders experienced more physical withdrawal symptoms, craving for opioids, and negative drug effects. Holders had less psychological distress and experienced less negative mood states than the other groups. Partial holders had less agreeable personalities compared to patients in the other groups. In Study 3, opioid and nicotine withdrawal symptoms and effects were measured in 40 methadone-maintained patients who were current smokers during trough and peak methadone effects, both pre and post-nicotine administration. Cigarette smoking enhanced opioid withdrawal suppression during the peak methadone condition, methadone attenuated nicotine withdrawal, and methadone and nicotine shared many of the same main effects, suggesting that smoking and methadone effects may be inseparable dimensions. In summary, the results of these studies suggest that in addition to physical symptoms, mood related factors are important to opioid withdrawal perception and that the mood factors and drug interactions can impact on a patient’s perception of satisfaction with methadone treatment.
3

The Role of in Utero Exposure to Drugs Beyond Opioids in the Development and Severity of Neonatal Opioid Withdrawal Syndrome (NOWS)

Bailey, Beth A., Wood, David, Shah, Darshan 30 June 2020 (has links)
No description available.
4

Opioid Withdrawal Signs and Symptoms in the Pediatric Patient during Opioid Tapering

Fisher, Deborah 10 April 2012 (has links)
Opioids are used routinely in the pediatric intensive care population for analgesia, sedation, blunting of physiologic responses to stress, and safety. In children, physical dependence may occur in as little as two to three days of continuous opioid therapy. Once the child no longer needs the opioid, the medications are reduced over time. A review of the literature revealed that the majority of the published studies used either a neonatal opioid assessment tool or no assessment tool. A subsequent international survey of pediatric providers found a wide range of opioid tapering practices and sporadic use of opioid withdrawal instruments to guide practice. Since tapering routines vary among practitioners, it is not uncommon to see signs and symptoms of opioid withdrawal. A prospective, descriptive study was conducted to describe the frequency of opioid withdrawal signs and symptoms and to identify factors associated with these opioid withdrawal signs and symptoms. The sample of 25 was drawn from all patients, ages 2 weeks to 21 years admitted to the Children’s Hospital of Richmond Pediatric Intensive Care Unit (PICU) and who have received continuous infusion or scheduled opioids for at least 5 days. Data collected included: opioid withdrawal score (WAT-1), opioid taper rate (total dose of opioid per day in morphine equivalents per kilogram [MEK]), pretaper peak MEK, pretaper cumulative MEK, number of days of opioid exposure prior to taper, and age. Out of 26 enrolled participants, only 9 (45%) had opioid withdrawal on any given day. In addition, there was limited variability in WAT-1 scores. The most common symptoms notes were diarrhea, vomit, sweat, and fever. For optimal opioid withdrawal assessments, clinicians should use a validated instrument such as the WAT-1 to measure for signs and symptoms of opioid withdrawal. Further research is indicated to examine risk factors for opioid withdrawal in children.
5

Differential effects of endocannabinoid catabolic inhibitors on opioid withdrawal in mice

Gamage, Thomas 19 December 2013 (has links)
The effects of cannabinoids in reducing somatic signs of opioid withdrawal have been known for some time. In morphine dependent rodents, opioid withdrawal following precipitation with the mu opioid antagonist naloxone elicits robust withdrawal behaviors including jumps, paw flutters, head shakes, diarrhea and weight loss. Delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol has been shown to reduce this opioid withdrawal in mice via activation of the cannabinoid type-1 (CB1) receptor and recently it has been shown that inhibition of the catabolic enzymes for endocannabinoids also reduce somatic signs of opioid withdrawal. Specifically, inhibition the enzyme fatty acid amide hydrolase (FAAH), the catabolic enzyme for the endocannabinoid N-arachidonoylethanolamide (AEA; anandamide) or inhibition of the enzyme monoacylglycerol lipase (MAGL), the catabolic enzyme for the endocannabinoid 2-arachindonoylglycerol (2-AG) has been shown to reduce opioid withdrawal in mice. However, FAAH inhibition only reduced a subset of withdrawal signs in mice and full MAGL inhibition which maximally reduced somatic withdrawal signs has been shown to produce THC-like effects and dependence potential. Additionally, the effects of endocannabinoid catabolic inhibitors on other aspects of withdrawal, such as the negative motivational effects, are not known. The objectives of this dissertation were to 1) assess the efficacy of dual inhibition of FAAH and MAGL on somatic signs of opioid withdrawal and 2) determine whether these treatments would produce cannabimimetic effects (hypomotility, catalepsy, antinociception and hypothermia); 3) develop other behavioral assays of opioid withdrawal; and 4) determine if endocannabinoid catabolic inhibitors would reduce the acquisition of opioid withdrawal induced conditioned place avoidance (CPA) as a measure of the negative motivational consequences of opioid withdrawal. We found that full inhibition of FAAH with the selective inhibitor PF-3845 and partial inhibition of MAGL with the selective inhibitor JZL184 reduced withdrawal-related jumps and the expression of diarrhea to a greater degree than either inhibitor alone and these effects were shown to be CB1 mediated. Additionally, we tested the novel dual FAAH/MAGL inhibitor SA-57 which has greater potency at inhibiting FAAH over MAGL and found that it similarly reduced withdrawal signs at doses that only partially elevated 2-AG while fully elevating AEA; furthermore, SA-57 did not produce cannabimimetic effects at these doses. We next assessed the effects of morphine withdrawal in five behavioral assays: marble burying, novelty-induced hypophagia, the light/dark box, a novel procedure developed to assess “escape behavior” and the CPA procedure. From these studies we selected the CPA procedure to further evaluate the effects of endocannabinoid catabolic inhibitors to determine their ability to reduce the negative motivational aspect of opioid withdrawal. We found that naloxone (0.056 mg/kg) produced robust CPA in morphine-pelleted, but not placebo-pelleted, mice and that this dose elicited minimal somatic withdrawal signs. Morphine pretreatment was shown to block withdrawal CPA and withdrawal jumping in mice while clonidine only blocked withdrawal CPA and these served as positive controls. We found that THC, JZL184, and SA-57 significantly reduced the percentage of mice that jumped during the conditioning session, demonstrating that these treatments blocked the somatic signs of withdrawal. However, none of these treatments significantly affected acquisition of the withdrawal CPA. These studies suggest that dual inhibition of FAAH/MAGL has enhanced effects on attenuating withdrawal-related jumps and diarrhea, but not the negative motivational aspects of morphine withdrawal as inferred by the Pavlovian CPA experiments.
6

Association between Feeding Difficulties and Length of Hospital Stay among Infants Diagnosed with Neonatal Opioid Withdrawal Syndrome

Sodeke, Patrick Olumuyiwa, Bhetuwal, Kanta, Chroust, Alyson, Johnson, Michelle, Shah, Darshan 04 May 2020 (has links)
Background: The incidence of neonatal opioid withdrawal syndrome (NOWS), a drug withdrawal syndrome mainly associated with opioid exposure in-utero has significantly increased in the United States over the last decade with infants with NOWS staying longer in the hospital than those without NOWS. Objectives: To determine if feeding tube use while on admission is associated with length of hospital stay among infants diagnosed with NOWS. We also compared the differences between infants with NOWS who required the use of feeding tubes while on admission, and those that did not, based on infant and maternal characteristics. Methods: This was a retrospective cohort study of infants delivered between July 1, 2011 and June 30, 2016 at Ballad Health System. Our inclusion criteria were infants who were exposed to opioids in-utero and received a diagnosis of NOWS based on 2 consecutive Finnegan scores of 10, or 3 consecutive scores of 8, or treatment with morphine. Medical chart record of 294 infants who met these criteria were reviewed for infant and maternal characteristics. Our outcome variable was infant length of hospital stay and our predictor variable was feeding tube use an indicator for feeding difficulties. Chi-square test and t-test were used to compare infant and maternal characteristics by feeding tube use. Simple linear regression models were used to assess the effect of feeding tube use and infant and maternal characteristics on infant length of hospital stay. Multiple linear regression was used to model infant length of hospital stay predicted by feeding tube use, while adjusting for neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) admission, treatment with morphine, and maternal benzodiazepine use during pregnancy. All analyses were done using SAS 9.4. Results: Of the 294 infants diagnosed with NOWS, 22.11% had feeding difficulties that necessitated use of feeding tubes. Infants who used feeding tubes were significantly more likely to be born preterm (20.31% vs 8.73%, p=0.0096) to be admitted into the NICU (98.46% vs 51.09%, p=
7

The Care of Hospitalized Intravenous Drug Users in 2019

Spivack, Stephanie January 2019 (has links)
People who inject drugs, particularly opioids, are a growing population, especially in North Philadelphia. This population is at high risk for medical complications that require hospitalization. While hospitalized, this population poses unique challenges to the healthcare system, including high costs and readmission rates, as well as stress and burnout among providers and staff. These patients are at high risk of discharges against medical advice because of complicated social factors as well as inadequate recognition of pain and withdrawal. As the opioid epidemic evolves, previous strategies for managing these patients, which traditionally relied on referral to psychiatry or social work in addition to symptomatic treatment, need to be re-evaluated. Ethically, the decision-making capacity of these patients is frequently called into question, and there is a difficult-to-strike balance between respecting their autonomy and acting with beneficence to provide the best care. There are also public health concerns that come into play. Better acknowledgment of the issues that this population faces, and better management of pain and withdrawal, may improve their outcomes, as well as reduce provider stress and burnout. / Urban Bioethics
8

Perinatal Buprenorphine Effects on Offspring Growth, Opioid Withdrawal, and Brain Morphology in Rats

Barnes, Parker 01 May 2024 (has links) (PDF)
Opioid use disorder (OUD) impacts 5.6 million people in the US. Buprenorphine (BUP) is a commonly prescribed opioid medication used to treat OUD, including in pregnant women. However, opioid use during pregnancy is associated with poorer infant outcomes including reduced fetal growth, neurodevelopmental deficits, and neonatal opioid withdrawal syndrome (NOWS). Recent clinical data suggests that providing mothers with a lower dose of BUP may result in fewer negative outcomes in infants. Here, a preclinical rodent model of low-dose perinatal BUP exposure was used to study offspring health outcomes in the neonate, juvenile, and adolescent offspring. Dams were given clinically relevant doses of BUP prior to and throughout gestation, and continuing through weaning to mimic human doses and exposure. Although the lowest BUP dose still elicited signs of NOWS in offspring, there were fewer negative effects on overall brain morphology across the early lifespan than that of the higher BUP dose compared to controls.
9

Coordinating Education & Interventions: An Exploration of Prenatal Opioid Exposure Through the Family Lens

Reichelt, Melinda Beth 05 November 2021 (has links)
No description available.
10

Essai clinique randomisé comparant la méthadone et la morphine pour la prévention du syndrome de sevrage aux opiacés en pédiatrie

Samson, Marie-Ève 06 1900 (has links)
Introduction : La tolérance induite par l’utilisation prolongée des opiacés peut se traduire par un syndrome de sevrage aux opiacés (SDSO). Il n’existe aucun consensus sur la méthode idéale de sevrage des opiacés pour prévenir le SDSO chez la clientèle des soins intensifs pédiatriques (SIP). L’objectif de cette étude était de comparer l’efficacité de deux stratégies de sevrage des opiacés, à savoir la méthadone et la morphine administrées par voie entérale, à prévenir le SDSO. Devis : Essai clinique randomisé à double aveugle chez les enfants sous ventilation mécanique hospitalisés aux SIP. Méthode : Nous avons comparé la durée totale de sevrage, l’incidence et la sévérité du SDSO chez les enfants à risque au moins modéré de SDSO sevrés avec la méthadone et la morphine entérales. Les enfants inclus étaient ceux hospitalisés au Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Sainte-Justine ou au Centre Mère-Enfant Soleil de Québec entre le 1er novembre 2003 et le 31 mai 2009. Résultats : Quarante-huit patients (22 groupe méthadone et 26 groupe morphine) ont été inclus et 30 patients ont complété le protocole de sevrage (16 groupe méthadone et 14 groupe morphine). La durée médiane de sevrage était de 5.4 jours dans le groupe méthadone comparativement à 5.8 jours pour le groupe morphine (p=0.49). Il n’y avait pas de différence dans l’incidence du SDSO (62.5% versus 42.9%; p=0.46), et dans sa sévérité (12.5% versus 14.3% de SDSO sévère; p=0.62). Conclusion : L’efficacité d’un sevrage standardisé des opiacés par la méthadone était comparable à celle de la morphine. / Background : The prolonged use of opioids has been associated with opioid tolerance and weaning is necessary to prevent opioid withdrawal symptoms (OWS). Little research exist for an ideal effective opioid taper to reduce the prevalence of OWS. This study aim to compare the effectiveness of two opioid taper strategies, enteral’s methadone and morphine, in preventing the occurrence of OWS among pediatric intensive care patients. Design: Double-blinded randomized controlled trial in mechanically ventilated children (MVCs) hospitalized in 2 pediatric intensive care units (PICU). Methods: Eligible patients were MVCs at moderate risk of OWS admitted in PICU of the Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Sainte-Justine or the Centre Mère-Enfant Soleil de Québec between November 1, 2003 and May 31, 2009. We assessed the total weaning duration, the OWS’s incidence and the OWS’s severity in a methadone’s and a morphine’s taper schedule. Results: Forty-eight patients were included, 22 in the methadone group and 26 in the morphine group and 30 patients completed the weaning protocol (16 methadone and 14 morphine). The median duration of weaning was 5.4 days among methadone’s patients as opposed to 5.8 days among morphine’s group (p=0.49). There was no statistical difference between groups for OWS’s incidence (62.5% vs 42.9%; p=0.46), nor for its severity (12.5% vs 14.3% of severe OWS; p=0.62). Conclusion: The use of a standardized opioid weaning protocol with enteral methadone was as effective as the enteral morphine one’s to prevent OWS. Further studies are needed to determine an ideal opioid taper to reduce OWS.

Page generated in 0.029 seconds