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Journal Article

Citation

Caffrey CR, Lank PM. Open Access Emerg. Med. 2018; 10: 9-23.

Affiliation

Department of Emergency Medicine, Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University, Chicago, IL, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, Dove Press)

DOI

10.2147/OAEM.S120120

PMID

29302196

PMCID

PMC5741979

Abstract

Patients can use numerous drugs that exist outside of existing regulatory statutes in order to get "legal highs." Legal psychoactive substances represent a challenge to the emergency medicine physician due to the sheer number of available agents, their multiple toxidromes and presentations, their escaping traditional methods of analysis, and the reluctance of patients to divulge their use of these agents. This paper endeavors to cover a wide variety of "legal highs," or uncontrolled psychoactive substances that may have abuse potential and may result in serious toxicity. These agents include not only some novel psychoactive substances aka "designer drugs," but also a wide variety of over-the-counter medications, herbal supplements, and even a household culinary spice. The care of patients in the emergency department who have used "legal high" substances is challenging. Patients may misunderstand the substance they have been exposed to, there are rarely any readily available laboratory confirmatory tests for these substances, and the exact substances being abused may change on a near-daily basis. This review will attempt to group legal agents into expected toxidromes and discuss associated common clinical manifestations and management. A focus on aggressive symptom-based supportive care as well as management of end-organ dysfunction is the mainstay of treatment for these patients in the emergency department.


Language: en

Keywords

anticho-linergic toxidrome; hallucinogens; inhalants; legal highs; novel psychoactive substances; opioid toxidrome; sympathomimetic toxidrome; toxicology

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