Ryan Feldman PharmD DABAT Profile picture
Dec 31, 2022 27 tweets 14 min read Read on X
Tomorrow is NYE, there will be partying, pills, and powders. Some leading to overdose.

I work in the ER NYE/NYD & expect a few "OD's" from said pills n powders. What exactly is in them?

A 🧵from Camden, a VERY human 28 y.o male, on the illicit drug supply

#MedED #FOAMed Image
Cam was out with his friends celebrating NYE with some beverages when one of his friends offered him a tan powder. Cam was pretty hesitant at first but.. ImageImage
Eventually peer pressure won. Cam gave it a try.

A few minutes after trying the substance... ImageImage
He started to feel groggy/lethargic, his pupils became smaller, he laid down (and I guess took of his shirt at some point) and appeared to fall asleep. He soon became completely unresponsive to belly rub and appeared to have apnea and cyanosis. ImageImageImage
His friends panicked, they couldn't wake him up.

One friend asked "What did you give him man?"

So our first question, what substance did Cam most likely ingest?
Well common things being common, lets look at the stats.

Top 3 drug overdose deaths

3⃣ Cocaine

2⃣Meth
.
.
.
.
🥇Far and away the winner, synthetic opioids. And look at that, Cam's symptoms match an opioid. Image
For those guessing oxycodone or even heroin. We are now in the 4th wave of the "opioid epidemic". Natural and semisynthetic opioid deaths are declining while deaths from synthetic opioids AND stimulants (alone and in combination) are rising. Image
Back to our friend who was asked "What did you give him man?"

He responds "a friend gave it to me and said it was a crushed M30!"
Pictured below are "M30's". Counterfeit ("pressed") fentanyl tablets designed to look like oxy 30's.

Rainbow fent is included here. If you haven't seen them yet, you will. These are a rising cause of OD but sadly not the only pressed fent tablets. ImageImageImage
In fact counterfeit fentanyl tablets are a HUGE problem right now. They are marketed as opioids, benzodiazepines, ADHD meds and more.

Another place they're found is peoples bodies at the medical examiner. These "pressed" pills killed Mac Miller, Prince, and uncountable others ImageImage
Just how much fentanyl is in these counterfeit tablets?

It varies. A DEA Analysis of seized fentanyl tablets found the average strength ~1.7 mg

One study of 18 counterfeit "norco" found a range of 0.6-6.6 mg,

10 fold differences within the same supply=high risk for OD ImageImage
Its not just fentanyl either, fentanyl is the MOST prevalent synthetic but fentanyl/non-fentanyl opioid analogues frequently pop up in the market.

A 2021 analysis confiscated fent found only 90% fent. The 2nd most common was p-fluorofentanyl Image
A medical surveillance group known as the "Toxic investigator Consortium" who sends discarded biologic samples from ED overdose patients to @CFSRE_ to screen for novel psychoactive substances found high rates of p-fluorofentanyl.

So its in products and your patients. Image
p-Flourofent is a fent analog that was popular in the 1980's under the name "China White".

It may be more potent than fentanyl and is making a bit of a resurgence now. Some speculate it is due a fentanyl precursor (4-ANPP) being scheduled but flouro-4ANPP remaining available. Image
What about the non fenatnyl opioids?

Introducing "Benzimidazole/Nitazene" opioids.

Many showed up in 2019 as unscheduled research chems. Some may have heard of "Iso" or isotonitazene.

Potency varies, 50 x less to 20 x more potent than fentanyl (e.g., etonitazene) in vitro ImageImage
But opioids are opioids right? We can treat these all with naloxone.

Recognizing that Cam was experiencing a classic Opioid toxidrome, a bystander trained in naloxone admin came by and gave Cam a dose.

He started breathing more Yet he remained somewhat unresponsive ImageImage
What non-opioids are in the opioid supply? Well lots, but one of increasing concern is Xylazine. A veterinary alpha-2 agonist (similar to clonidine).

The group that looks at discarded blood samples in OD patients found xylazine prevalence as high as 20%. Its likely higher now. Image
This stuff is endemic in the northeast but you can still see it in other parts of the U.S., especially Midwest/south.

It causes lots of issues and we are not sure how its impacting OD management.

In theory high dose naloxone works for other alpha-2-agonist (clonidine). ImageImage
Fearing for his safety, Camden's friends RUSH him to the emergency department. Image
The ED team begins treating Camden.

He is initially minimally responsive but the team gives another 2 mg of naloxone x 2 IV and he begins waking up. 🏆🙌

Wanting to get an idea of what Camden may have taken, someone eagerly orders a urine drug screen. ImageImage
"RYAN WHO SENDS A URINE DRUG SCREEN THAT HAS FALSE POSITIVES, FALSE NEGATIVES, AND DOESNT REPRESENT ACUTE USE?!" You angrily shout at me.

Well according to EPIC data, 50% of people treating overdoses. Image
Sadly UDS often looks for opiates/semisynthetics.
Despite declining prevalence, testing is unchanged

Fentanyl prevalence predominates but testing for fentanyl in acute OD is dismally low.

If bother to look (thats a whole other philosophical discussion), look for fentanyl Image
A urinary fent is added AND....its negative

Non fentanyl opioids like nitazenes are not detectable. Other fentalogs are also prevalent, and may go undetected by commercial assay.

In one study, CARFENTANIL, the thing that tranqs polar bears, was undetected by >80% of assays Image
Cam is observed for several hours, a poison center is called, he gets a pysch eval and is discharged home with naloxone.

We never actually find out what Cam took. Was it an M30, ISO, p-flouro, was there xyalazine? We may never know. The landscape is ever changing Image
What we do know.
1. Opioids are 🥇OD death
2. Synthetics (mainly fentanyl) 🥇opioid, pressed tablets=concerning trend
3. Negative tests don't r/o exposure
4. Xylazine/p-fluoro increasing
5. Landscape=changing (see table for resources)
6. Cam is a good boy
#FOAMcc #TwitteRx Image
Thanks for following along. Much of this adapted from a recent #ASHP22 presentation which some may have seen😁

If you found this useful please RT 1st tweet to spread the word on the illicit opioid supply landscape!

#harmreduction, #NYE, #Fentanyl, #Cam

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More from @EMPoisonPharmD

Sep 29
I know someone else has chewed on this as long as me.

Help.

Rumack's oral NAC for acetaminophen planned 2.5 mmol NAC per hour

2.5= 1.5 mmol to cover natural glutathione (GSH) turn over per hour
+
1 mmol/hr to achieve 4 mmol in 4 h.
shorturl.at/LY0b0
4 mmol was selected because animals see hepatic necrosis from APAP when 70% glutathione (GSH) is depleted.

Bench data showed average liver was 4 mmol GSH/L and 1.5 L. So the average liver had 6mmol GSH (1.5L x 4L), and 4mmol was 70% of the GSH

shorturl.at/LY0b0
A 15.9 g dose of acetaminophen contains = 0.105 mols, which is 105 mmols.

At 4% NAPQI production (which we know is wrong but that’s what it was derived from) That dose makes 4 mmol NAPQI (0.04 X 105)

After it is ENTIRELY metabolized
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Mar 25
You're working in the ED when a 30 y.o male presents 30 minutes after envenomation to the right index finger by his pet snake (left).

He has a picture of culprit (right) , and it is definitely NOT from America.

A 🧵on U.S. exotic envenomation management.

(shared with consent)
Image
Image
This involved a Blue Indonesian pit viper (Trimereserus Insularis) but this could have been any exotic snake. There have been 50-110 exotic snake bites reported to Poison Centers annually since 2012.

P.S. limited free copies of report available here:
tandfonline.com/eprint/D6PYXIG…
Exotic venomous animals are found in several environments within the U.S. including zoos, homes of reptile enthusiasts, laboratories of venom milking industries, and in illegal venomous reptile trafficking rings. In this case, it was a pet of a reptile hobbyist.
Read 22 tweets
Jun 21, 2023
Toxicologists are often consulted about 🍄foraging misadventures (wild mushroom ingestion).

Usually you don't get a clear mushroom image like this video (at best a blurry photo of some OTHER mushroom), or more often no image.

So what to do?

A 🍄🧵
#FOAMed #FoamCC #MedEd
If you do have a good sample or photo you can work with a mycologist (your posion center knows one) to identify the shroom. But this is not frequent.
Since we almost never have that we usually rely on history and symptoms
Key to differentiating mushroom toxicity types: time to onset of GI issues. Most mushrooms upset the tummy. The 5hr “rule” helps identify bad ones.
Read 15 tweets
Jan 17, 2023
Had the opportunity to be part of a fascinating work. Americas Poison Center Annual report.

A comprehensive poisoning epidemiology study compiled of data from all 55 U.S. Poison Centers

Free 🔗➡️bit.ly/3wbIwWS
Pubmed🔗➡️bit.ly/3wdgeLP

A🧵on emerging trends
This year we highlighted two important trends in addition to baseline poisoning data.

Firstly, THC product exposures have been increasing since 2016, and the demographics are changing. In 2021, edible products (red line) eclipsed plant based marijuana (blue line) for products Image
The change in products also represents changing demographics. While Adults (gold) comprise the majority of exposures, pediatric<6 (green) is taking an ever increasing share of the THC exposure calls since 2016. Image
Read 12 tweets
Jan 16, 2023
We wrote this case of #fentanyl exposure w/ NO clinical effects (bit.ly/3k7I1dF) to help realign fentanyl exposure risk perception.

I thought it was one of the only confirmed cases...turns out there are quite a few.

A 🧵on NIOSH health hazard evaluations
#MedEd
If someone is concerned that hazards are interfering with their job function, NIOSH can get called in to do a field evaluation.

They review exposures, med records, forensics, and write public reports.

They have QUITE a few confirmed fentanyl reports.

cdc.gov/niosh/hhe/defa…
Like this one, where a law enforcement officer had CONFIRMED methamphetamine/fentanyl blown all over them, rubbed sanitizer on it (don't do that), felt dizzy, had hypertension, were alert, breathing normally. No Opioid effects. Back to normal in a few hrs.
cdc.gov/niosh/hhe/repo…
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Jan 4, 2023
A few years ago I made a digital resuscitation game with a working cardiovascular system. A playground to play with pressors/resuscitation.

TODAY I REALIZED I COULD PLAY IT IN Virtual Reality

So I made a video. An 11 part 🧵for VR septic intubation!
#FOAMcc #FOAMed #MedEd
Part 2/11

Virtual Reality Septic Shock Resuscitation/Intubation

Video YouTube link here🔗: )

Play game ➡️: rfeldman.itch.io/the-resuscitat…

#Medtwitter #FOAMcc #FOAMed #TwitteRx #MedEd
Part 3/11

Virtual Reality Septic Shock Resuscitation/Intubation

Video YouTube link here🔗: )

Play game ➡️: rfeldman.itch.io/the-resuscitat…

#Medtwitter #FOAMcc #FOAMed #TwitteRx #MedEd
Read 14 tweets

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