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Diarrhea and delirium from naltrexone-precipitated opioid withdrawal

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 October 2019

Isabelle Miles
Affiliation:
Department of Emergency Medicine, St Paul's Hospital and the University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC
Andrew Kestler
Affiliation:
Department of Emergency Medicine, St Paul's Hospital and the University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC Center for Health Evaluation and Outcome Science, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC
Frank X. Scheuermeyer*
Affiliation:
Department of Emergency Medicine, St Paul's Hospital and the University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC Center for Health Evaluation and Outcome Science, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC
*
Correspondence to: Dr. Frank X. Scheuermeyer, 1081 Burrard Street, Vancouver, BCV6Z 1Y6 Canada; Email: frank.scheuermeyer@gmail.com

Abstract

Type
Clinical Correspondence
Copyright
Copyright © Canadian Association of Emergency Physicians 2019

INTRODUCTION

Naltrexone is a competitive opioid antagonistReference Anton1 that is first-line therapy for alcohol use disorder and alternative therapy for opioid use disorder. Should a patient actively using regular opioids ingest naltrexone, rapid severe opioid withdrawal might take place (clinical opioid withdrawal scale [COWS] >36).Reference Armstrong, Little and Murray2Reference Wrightman, Nelson, Lee, Fox and Smith4 We report two such cases, both likely due to diverted naltrexone.

Case 1

A 50-year-old woman was transported by ambulance (EMS) to an urban emergency department (ED) with sudden profound agitation and profuse watery diarrhea but no further history. Her heart rate was 150 beats per minute, temperature 37.4°C (99°F), and blood pressure 130/80 mm Hg. There were no signs of trauma, and she had sluggish 4-mm pupils bilaterally with normal respiratory effort. She was given 20 mg of midazolam intravenously for agitation. Her provincial pharmanet indicated that she was only prescribed daily methadone 100 mg, including that morning. Her agitation and watery diarrhea worsened, and she required sedation with 40 mg of midazolam and 20 mg of loxapine over the next 4 hours; she was administered 4 L of normal saline to account for gastrointestinal losses.

All blood testing was normal, and her urine tested positive for methadone and benzodiazepines. Head computed tomography (CT) was normal. The patient additionally required 40 mg of midazolam over the next 24 hours, generally in 5-mg boluses every 2 hours, as well as saline at 200 mL/hour. She remained in the ED overnight, and 25 hours post arrival she normalized. Shortly after ingesting methadone the day before, she bought a single pill from a new supplier, assumed it to be diazepam, and remembered little except profuse diarrhea. An addictions physician showed her a naltrexone 50 mg pill and she confirmed that she had taken that pill. She was discharged uneventfully with successful follow-up at the addictions clinic.

Case 2

A 45-year-old male was transported to an urban community ED by means of EMS with sudden onset of agitation, severe diarrhea, vomiting, diaphoresis, and diffuse musculoskeletal pain shortly after taking an unknown pill. He was taking daily witnessed ingestion methadone for opioid use disorder. Vital signs and blood testing were normal. His COWS was 38, and soon after his arrival, he volunteered that the culprit pill had not been prescribed, but provided by a family member and called naltrexone. Fluid losses were treated with a total of 3 L of normal saline over the next 3 hours, and he was given lorazepam 2 mg orally to treat both agitation and withdrawal symptoms. He was admitted to an internal medicine ward overnight for ongoing symptom management before uneventful discharge, with primary care follow-up 2 days later.

DISCUSSION

Naltrexone (half-life 4 hours) is liver-metabolized to 6B-naltrexol (half-life 13 hours),Reference Anton1 and excreted in the urine. Both are competitive reversible opioid receptor antagonists, strongest at the mu receptor (where they outcompete other opioids, including methadone), less strong at the kappa receptor, and weakest at the delta receptor. The combined effect is to lower mesolimbic dopamine concentration,Reference Anton1 reducing euphoria from opioid and alcohol use and decreasing cravings. It is first-line pharmacologic therapy for alcohol use disorderReference Anton1 and possible alternative therapy for select patients with opioid use disorder. While a once-monthly depot version is approved in the United States,Reference Anton1 the only Canadian formulations are daily 25- and 50-mg tablets.

Naltrexone use may become more common for alcohol use disorder, and emergency physicians need to be aware of the consequences of its inappropriate ingestion. Because this is a competitive antagonist whose effects will persist at least 24 hours, patients generally require 7 days or more without opioids before its initiation1–3; otherwise, administration can result in profound opioid withdrawal (COWS >36; in the first case, the score was 41) for 24–48 hours, and this can be life-threatening.Reference Armstrong, Little and Murray2Reference Wrightman, Nelson, Lee, Fox and Smith4

The diagnosis is exclusionary, as ominous metabolic, structural, traumatic, and additional toxicological entities also require consideration.Reference Armstrong, Little and Murray2Reference Wrightman, Nelson, Lee, Fox and Smith4 Confirmatory serum (quantitative) and urine (qualitative) tests may not be available in all settings and results typically take days to return, outside the time frame for management.

In 132 patients at a single Iranian ED, nearly all (96.2%) had agitation, while approximately one-quarter each had nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, and one-sixth had diarrhea. Ominously, the authors attributed a 32% “partial recovery” to a high incidence of aspiration pneumonia; one patient had a fatal myocardial infarction during the recovery phase.Reference Hassanian-Moghaddam, Afzali and Pooya3 An Australian ED described 18 patients considered to have primary gastrointestinal symptoms, treated chiefly with crystalloid fluid and antiemetics over a mean 11-hour length of stay. Fourteen patients had primarily severe agitation, treated with a mean dose of 211 mg of diazepam or midazolam over a mean length of stay of 23 hours; two patients required intubation for airway compromise.Reference Armstrong, Little and Murray2

Lack of evidence-based guidelines adds to management challenges. Agitation can be managed with benzodiazepines. Nausea and vomiting are treated with antiemetics and airway protection is paramount.Reference Armstrong, Little and Murray2,Reference Hassanian-Moghaddam, Afzali and Pooya3 Fluid losses should be estimated and replaced with crystalloid to maintain blood pressure and urine output. Musculoskeletal pain should be managed with nonopioid analgesia, and withdrawal can be treated with clonidine 0.1–0.2 mg every 6 hours.Reference Armstrong, Little and Murray2 In consultation with addiction specialist or toxicologist, opioids with strong affinity for the mu receptor such as hydromorphoneReference Volpe, Tobin and Mellon5 can be considered for withdrawal management. While mean hospitalization time has been reported as 18 hours,Reference Armstrong, Little and Murray2 far longer stays occur if substantial sedation or intubation is required.Reference Armstrong, Little and Murray2Reference Wrightman, Nelson, Lee, Fox and Smith4

CONCLUSION

For patients with regular, and recent, opioid use, severe agitation or other manifestations of opioid withdrawal should prompt physicians to consider naltrexone-precipitated withdrawal, while providing supportive care and ruling out other aetiologies.

Acknowledgements

F.S. conceived the idea, and I.M. and F.S. provided the cases. F.S. drafted the manuscript with critically important revisions from I.M., and assistance from A.K.

References

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