Cocaine abuse in methadone maintenance patients has emerged as a significant clinical problem. To determine if raising the daily methadone dosage is an effective way to eliminate cocaine abuse, 74 methadone maintenance patients maintained at daily dosages between 30 and 80 mg and who chronically abused cocaine were studied by a standard protocol. A total of 21 (28.4%) subjects ceased cocaine abuse when their methadone dosage was progressively raised to a maximal daily dose of 160 mg. Cocaine abuse appeared to accelerate elimination of methadone, since inadequate methadone serum concentrations (below 100 ng/ml) were found in 48 of 67 (71.6%) subjects tested 24 hours after a 100 mg oral methadone dose. Although cocaine abuse in methadone maintenance patients may respond to raising the daily methadone dosage, alternative treatments for cocaine abuse in methadone maintenance patients must be identified since cocaine abuse may lower serum methadone concentrations.
Adrenal gland metabolism is markedly altered in heroin addicts. During daytime hours, the addict may suffer corticoid deficiency of the addisonian type, and in the evening, an excess of the cushingoid type. The high plasma levels of cortisol that are found in the evening in addicts antagonize endogenous opioids in a manner similar to naloxone. In the present study, 72% of the heroin addicts who sought treatment demonstrated reduced adrenal cortisol reserve. Effective immune and stress responses are dependent on adrenal cortisol reserve. This finding provides an explanation for the heroin addict's vulnerability to AIDS and other infectious diseases. One of methadone's greatest attributes is that it helps normalize adrenal metabolism. Clinical methods to at least partially correct adrenal metabolism may enhance current opioid addiction treatment modalities.
The new quantitative urine tests for cocaine are an easy and inexpensive method of diagnosing and monitoring use of this drug and thus are practical for the primary care physician's office. They may help differentiate between occasional and addicted users, thus establishing the severity of the problem for the patient and family, employer, or school officials. Although the tests cannot be used for legal applications, they have great clinical value. The receptivity of patients and third parties to urine testing has been gratifying. Physicians are encouraged to consider use of these tests in office assessment.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.