Evaluation of the effect of methamphetamine on traumatic injury complications and outcomes

Abstract Background This study investigates the impact of methamphetamine use on trauma patient outcomes. Methods This retrospective study analyzed patients between 18 and 55 years old presenting to a single trauma center in San Bernardino County, CA who sustained traumatic injury during the 10-year...

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Main Authors: Michael M. Neeki, Fanglong Dong, Lidia Liang, Jake Toy, Braeden Carrico, Nina Jabourian, Arnold Sin, Farabi Hussain, Sharon Brown, Keyvan Safdari, Rodney Borger, David Wong
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-03-01
Series:Addiction Science & Clinical Practice
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13722-018-0112-6
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spelling doaj-8a0fe88ccca54aa98091d7c9d34ff1ab2020-11-24T20:44:49ZengBMCAddiction Science & Clinical Practice1940-06402018-03-011311710.1186/s13722-018-0112-6Evaluation of the effect of methamphetamine on traumatic injury complications and outcomesMichael M. Neeki0Fanglong Dong1Lidia Liang2Jake Toy3Braeden Carrico4Nina Jabourian5Arnold Sin6Farabi Hussain7Sharon Brown8Keyvan Safdari9Rodney Borger10David Wong11Department of Emergency Medicine, Arrowhead Regional Medical CenterWestern University of Health Sciences, College of Osteopathic Medicine of the PacificWestern University of Health Sciences, College of Osteopathic Medicine of the PacificWestern University of Health Sciences, College of Osteopathic Medicine of the PacificDepartment of Emergency Medicine, Arrowhead Regional Medical CenterDepartment of Emergency Medicine, Arrowhead Regional Medical CenterDepartment of Emergency Medicine, Arrowhead Regional Medical CenterDepartment of General Surgery, Arrowhead Regional Medical CenterDepartment of Emergency Medicine, Arrowhead Regional Medical CenterDepartment of Anesthesiology, Arrowhead Regional Medical CenterDepartment of Emergency Medicine, Arrowhead Regional Medical CenterDepartment of General Surgery, Arrowhead Regional Medical CenterAbstract Background This study investigates the impact of methamphetamine use on trauma patient outcomes. Methods This retrospective study analyzed patients between 18 and 55 years old presenting to a single trauma center in San Bernardino County, CA who sustained traumatic injury during the 10-year study period (January 1st, 2005 to December 31st, 2015). Routine serum ethanol levels and urine drug screens (UDS) were completed on all trauma patients. Exclusion criteria included patients with an elevated serum ethanol level (> 0 mg/dL). Those who screened positive on UDS for only methamphetamine and negative for cocaine and cannabis (MA(+)) were compared to those with a triple negative UDS for methamphetamine, cocaine, and cannabis (MA(−)). The primary outcome studied was the impact of a methamphetamine positive drug screen on hospital mortality. Secondary outcomes included length of stay (LOS), heart rate, systolic and diastolic blood pressure (SBP and DBP, respectively), and total amount of blood products utilized during hospitalization. To analyze the effect of methamphetamine, age, gender, injury severity score, and mechanism of injury (blunt vs. penetrating) were matched between MA(−) and MA(+) through a propensity matching algorithm. Results After exclusion, 2538 patients were included in the final analysis; 449 were patients in the MA(+) group and 2089 patients in the MA(−) group. A selection of 449 MA(−) patients were matched with the MA(+) group based on age, gender, injury severity score, and mechanism of injury. This led to a final sample size of 898 patients with 449 patients in each group. No statistically significant change was observed in hospital mortality. Notably, a methamphetamine positive drug screen was associated with a longer LOS (median of 4 vs. 3 days in MA(+) and MA(−), respectively, p < 0.0001), an increased heart rate at the scene (103 vs. 94 bpm for MA(+) and MA(−), respectively, p = 0.0016), and an increased heart rate upon arrival to the trauma center (100 vs. 94 bpm for MA(+) and MA(−), respectively, p < 0.0001). Moreover, the MA(+) group had decreased SBP at the scene compared to the MA(−) group (127 vs. 132 bpm for MA(+) and MA(−), respectively, p = 0.0149), but SBP was no longer statistically different when patients arrived at the trauma center (p = 0.3823). There was no significant difference in DBP or in blood products used. Conclusion Methamphetamine positive drug screens in trauma patients were not associated with an increase in hospital mortality; however, a methamphetamine positive drug screen was associated with a longer LOS and an increased heart rate.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13722-018-0112-6MethamphetamineTraumaLength of stayHospital mortalityTraumatic outcome
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michael M. Neeki
Fanglong Dong
Lidia Liang
Jake Toy
Braeden Carrico
Nina Jabourian
Arnold Sin
Farabi Hussain
Sharon Brown
Keyvan Safdari
Rodney Borger
David Wong
spellingShingle Michael M. Neeki
Fanglong Dong
Lidia Liang
Jake Toy
Braeden Carrico
Nina Jabourian
Arnold Sin
Farabi Hussain
Sharon Brown
Keyvan Safdari
Rodney Borger
David Wong
Evaluation of the effect of methamphetamine on traumatic injury complications and outcomes
Addiction Science & Clinical Practice
Methamphetamine
Trauma
Length of stay
Hospital mortality
Traumatic outcome
author_facet Michael M. Neeki
Fanglong Dong
Lidia Liang
Jake Toy
Braeden Carrico
Nina Jabourian
Arnold Sin
Farabi Hussain
Sharon Brown
Keyvan Safdari
Rodney Borger
David Wong
author_sort Michael M. Neeki
title Evaluation of the effect of methamphetamine on traumatic injury complications and outcomes
title_short Evaluation of the effect of methamphetamine on traumatic injury complications and outcomes
title_full Evaluation of the effect of methamphetamine on traumatic injury complications and outcomes
title_fullStr Evaluation of the effect of methamphetamine on traumatic injury complications and outcomes
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of the effect of methamphetamine on traumatic injury complications and outcomes
title_sort evaluation of the effect of methamphetamine on traumatic injury complications and outcomes
publisher BMC
series Addiction Science & Clinical Practice
issn 1940-0640
publishDate 2018-03-01
description Abstract Background This study investigates the impact of methamphetamine use on trauma patient outcomes. Methods This retrospective study analyzed patients between 18 and 55 years old presenting to a single trauma center in San Bernardino County, CA who sustained traumatic injury during the 10-year study period (January 1st, 2005 to December 31st, 2015). Routine serum ethanol levels and urine drug screens (UDS) were completed on all trauma patients. Exclusion criteria included patients with an elevated serum ethanol level (> 0 mg/dL). Those who screened positive on UDS for only methamphetamine and negative for cocaine and cannabis (MA(+)) were compared to those with a triple negative UDS for methamphetamine, cocaine, and cannabis (MA(−)). The primary outcome studied was the impact of a methamphetamine positive drug screen on hospital mortality. Secondary outcomes included length of stay (LOS), heart rate, systolic and diastolic blood pressure (SBP and DBP, respectively), and total amount of blood products utilized during hospitalization. To analyze the effect of methamphetamine, age, gender, injury severity score, and mechanism of injury (blunt vs. penetrating) were matched between MA(−) and MA(+) through a propensity matching algorithm. Results After exclusion, 2538 patients were included in the final analysis; 449 were patients in the MA(+) group and 2089 patients in the MA(−) group. A selection of 449 MA(−) patients were matched with the MA(+) group based on age, gender, injury severity score, and mechanism of injury. This led to a final sample size of 898 patients with 449 patients in each group. No statistically significant change was observed in hospital mortality. Notably, a methamphetamine positive drug screen was associated with a longer LOS (median of 4 vs. 3 days in MA(+) and MA(−), respectively, p < 0.0001), an increased heart rate at the scene (103 vs. 94 bpm for MA(+) and MA(−), respectively, p = 0.0016), and an increased heart rate upon arrival to the trauma center (100 vs. 94 bpm for MA(+) and MA(−), respectively, p < 0.0001). Moreover, the MA(+) group had decreased SBP at the scene compared to the MA(−) group (127 vs. 132 bpm for MA(+) and MA(−), respectively, p = 0.0149), but SBP was no longer statistically different when patients arrived at the trauma center (p = 0.3823). There was no significant difference in DBP or in blood products used. Conclusion Methamphetamine positive drug screens in trauma patients were not associated with an increase in hospital mortality; however, a methamphetamine positive drug screen was associated with a longer LOS and an increased heart rate.
topic Methamphetamine
Trauma
Length of stay
Hospital mortality
Traumatic outcome
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13722-018-0112-6
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