Clinical characteristics of new psychoactive substances: A multicenter study.

TH Chen, Hsin-Yung Chen, CC Lin, SW Liu, TI Weng, CC Fang, JH Yu, YC Chen, YJ Su

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal Article peer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background: New psychoactive substances (NPS) are synthetic alternatives to illicit drug abuse that are not under international control but may pose a public health threat. Moreover, the symptoms and signs of NPS users may be quite variable. This study aimed to figure out the clinical characteristics of NPS users presented to the emergency department (ED). Methods: A total of 1385 cases were tested via urine toxicity screening from March 25, 2019, to January 28, 2020, in six medical centers, and ten hospitals, in Taiwan. A total of 123 non-NPS cases and 77 NPS-use cases were enrolled in this study. We compared the patient data–vital signs, presentation, co-morbidities, behaviors, symptoms, electrocardiograms, laboratory data, length of stays–and outcomes of NPS users and non-NPS drug users. Results: NPS users were 5.7 years younger than the non-NPS drug users (37 vs. 42.7 years, p = 0.022). Presently, NPS users had a 2.6-fold (27.2%) higher rate of suicide and a 2.9-fold (11.7%) greater possibility of violence than non-NPS drug users. Moreover, in NPS users, eye-opening was affected at a scale of 3.1 versus 3.4 (p = 0.048) in non-NPS drug users in the evaluation of consciousness and they experienced a 4.3-fold greater feeling of palpitation (p = 0.024) and had 8.1-fold higher chance of presenting facial flush (p = 0.032) than non-NPS drug users. Conclusion: NPS users are relatively younger, are more likely to experience facial flush and palpitation and engage in more self-harm, violence, and suicide than non-NPS drug users. Physicians need to pay attention to people who have altered, bizarre mental statuses with the clinical characteristics described above.

Original languageAmerican English
Article number102469
Pages (from-to)102469
JournalJournal of forensic and legal medicine
Volume93
DOIs
StatePublished - 01 2023

Bibliographical note

Copyright © 2022 Elsevier Ltd and Faculty of Forensic and Legal Medicine. All rights reserved.

Keywords

  • Cathinone
  • New psychoactive substance
  • Traditional illicit drugs
  • Comorbidity
  • Humans
  • Substance-Related Disorders/epidemiology
  • Suicide
  • Drug Users
  • Psychotropic Drugs

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