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Detection of cocaine 24 h after administration before nasotracheal intubation. | LitMetric

Detection of cocaine 24 h after administration before nasotracheal intubation.

Acta Anaesthesiol Scand

Department of Anaesthesia, Centre of Head and Orthopaedics, Rigshospitalet, Copenhagen University Hospital, Copenhagen, Denmark.

Published: October 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Cocaine can be used as a nasal spray to relieve congestion before nasotracheal intubation, but there are legal risks if it is detected in patients during driving after surgery.
  • A study evaluated benzoylecgonine levels in saliva and cocaine levels in blood to see if they exceeded legal limits 1 and 24 hours post-surgery.
  • Results showed that 13% of patients had detectable benzoylecgonine in saliva and 3% had detectable cocaine in blood 24 hours after administration, highlighting the need for patients to be cautioned against driving for at least a day post-surgery.

Article Abstract

Background: Cocaine may be applied to decongest the nasal mucosa before nasotracheal intubation, but patients risk a criminal offence if cocaine is detected when patients drive a car shortly after surgery. We aimed to evaluate whether benzoylecgonine levels in saliva exceeded the cut-off point 24 h after administration in patients undergoing nasotracheal intubation and whether cocaine would be detectable above the Danish legal fixed limit in blood samples 1 and 24 h after surgery.

Methods: We conducted a prospective study following approval from the local research ethics committee and the national medicine agency. Written informed consent was obtained from all patients. We included patients scheduled for surgery under general anaesthesia with nasotracheal intubation. They received 80 mg cocaine as a nasal spray 5 min before induction and nasotracheal intubation. The primary outcome was a dichotomous assessment of benzoylecgonine levels in saliva samples measured 24 h after administration of nasal cocaine with a cut-off limit of 200 ng/mL. Secondary outcomes were dichotomous assessments of cocaine in whole blood samples measured 1 and 24 h after administration of nasal cocaine with a cut-off limit of 0.01 mg/kg.

Results: Overall, 70 patients had valid saliva samples and 75 had valid blood samples 24 h after cocaine administration. Benzoylecgonine in saliva was traceable above the cut-off in 9/70 patients (13%; CI: 6% to 23%), and cocaine in blood was detected above the cut-off in 2/75 patients (3%; CI: 0.3% to 9%).

Conclusion: We found benzoylecgonine traceable in saliva in 13% of patients and cocaine traceable in blood in 3% of patients 24 h after administration of 80 mg nasal cocaine. Patients should be informed when receiving cocaine and advised not to drive for at least 24 h.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/aas.14475DOI Listing

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