Barbiturate overdose

Barbiturate overdose
Classification and external resources
Specialty emergency medicine
ICD-10 F13.0, T42.3
ICD-9-CM 969
eMedicine article/813155

A barbiturate overdose results when a person takes excessive doses of barbiturates. Symptoms of an overdose typically include sluggishness, incoordination, difficulty in thinking, slowness of speech, faulty judgment, drowsiness, shallow breaths, and staggering. In severe cases, coma and death can result.[1] The lethal dosage of barbiturates varies greatly with tolerance and from one individual to another.[2]

Barbiturate overdose with other CNS (central nervous system) depressants, such as alcohol, opiates or benzodiazepines, is even more dangerous due to additive CNS and respiratory depressant effects. In the case of benzodiazepines, barbiturates also increase the binding affinity of the benzodiazepine binding sites thus leading to an exaggerated benzodiazepine effect.[3] This makes predicting the effect of combinations difficult and the same dose of the same drugs will not always produce the same degree of sedation and respiratory depression from one day to the next.

Benzodiazepines increase the frequency of chloride channel opening while barbiturates increase the duration that the chloride pore remains open. If a normal pore opened once every 30 seconds to pass one chloride ion, a benzodiazepine may cause it to open once every ten seconds while a barbiturate may cause it to remain open until three ions have passed through. Separately, both of these increase the effect of the pore threefold, but together, the channel would allow three ions to pass every 10 seconds. This would exponentially increase the effect of the pore ninefold, greater than the sum of the two drugs effects.

The treatment of barbiturate abuse or overdose is generally supportive. The amount of support required depends on the person's symptoms. If the patient is drowsy but awake and can swallow and breathe without difficulty, the treatment can be as simple as monitoring the patient closely. If the patient is not breathing, it may involve mechanical ventilation until the drug has worn off.

Supportive treatment often includes the following:

In famous cases, Marilyn Monroe, Dalida,[4][5] Judy Garland, Jimi Hendrix, and also Edie Sedgwick died from a barbiturate overdose.

See also

References

  1. "Barbiturate intoxication and overdose". MedLine Plus. Retrieved 15 July 2008.
  2. Keltner, Norman (2010) Psychiatric Nursing 6th ed., Mosby, ISBN 0323069517.
  3. Miller LG, Deutsch SI, Greenblatt DJ, Paul SM, Shader RI (1988). "Acute barbiturate administration increases benzodiazepine receptor binding in vivo". Psychopharmacology (Berl.) 96 (3): 385–90. doi:10.1007/BF00216067. PMID 2906155.
  4. "Dalida". New York Times. 5 May 1987. Retrieved 28 February 2008.
  5. Simmonds, Jeremy (2008). v. Chicago Review Press. p. 225. ISBN 1-55652-754-3.
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