Oral and intravenous methadone use: some clinical and pharmacokinetic aspects.


Autoria(s): Felder C.; Uehlinger C.; Baumann P.; Powell K.; Eap C.B.
Data(s)

1999

Resumo

A sample of 15 patients participating in an injectable methadone trial and of 15 patients in an oral methadone maintenance treatment, who admitted injecting part or all of their methadone take-home doses, were compared to 20 patients in maintenance treatment who use methadone exclusively by mouth. The present study confirms the poorer general health, the higher levels of emotional, psychological or psychiatric problems, the higher use of illicit drugs, and the higher number of problems related to employment and support associated with the use of the intravenous mode of administration of methadone. As expected, due to the shunt of metabolism in the gut wall and of the liver first-pass effect, higher concentration to dose ratios of (R)-methadone, which is the active enantiomer, were measured in the intravenous group (23% increase). This difference reached an almost statistically significant value (P = 0.054). This raises the question whether the effect of a higher methadone dose could be unconsciously sought by some of the intravenous methadone users.

Identificador

https://serval.unil.ch/?id=serval:BIB_A8A466938836

isbn:0376-8716 (Print)

pmid:10402158

isiid:000080656100015

doi:10.1016/S0376-8716(98)00190-2

Idioma(s)

en

Direitos

info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess

Fonte

Drug and Alcohol Dependence, vol. 55, no. 1-2, pp. 137-143

Palavras-Chave #Administration, Oral; Adult; Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale; Depressive Disorder/diagnosis; Depressive Disorder/etiology; Dose-Response Relationship, Drug; Employment; Female; Health Status; Heroin/administration & dosage; Heroin/pharmacology; Humans; Injections, Intravenous; Male; Methadone/administration & dosage; Methadone/adverse effects; Schizophrenia/diagnosis; Schizophrenia/etiology; Self Administration; Severity of Illness Index; Substance Withdrawal Syndrome/urine; Substance-Related Disorders/diagnosis; Substance-Related Disorders/psychology
Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/article

article