Legemiddel- og rusmiddelanalyser som øyeblikkelig hjelp
(2008) In Tidsskrift for den Norske Laegeforening 128(1). p.42-45- Abstract
Background. In some situations, and particularly when intoxications are suspected, it would be advantageous if medicines and drugs of abuse could be swiftly detected in serum or urine. Material and methods. The Department of Clinical Pharmacology at St. Olav University Hospital has since 2004 been developing a comprehensive toxicology service (at all hours 7-days/week) for immediate quantitative analysis of between 80 and 90 substances. We here present the service in further detail and evaluate its usefulness during its first full year, 2005. Two case reports are presented to further illustrate the possible benefits of this service. Results. Urgent testing was requested for a total of 390 samples; 351 serum and 39 urine samples. The... (More)
Background. In some situations, and particularly when intoxications are suspected, it would be advantageous if medicines and drugs of abuse could be swiftly detected in serum or urine. Material and methods. The Department of Clinical Pharmacology at St. Olav University Hospital has since 2004 been developing a comprehensive toxicology service (at all hours 7-days/week) for immediate quantitative analysis of between 80 and 90 substances. We here present the service in further detail and evaluate its usefulness during its first full year, 2005. Two case reports are presented to further illustrate the possible benefits of this service. Results. Urgent testing was requested for a total of 390 samples; 351 serum and 39 urine samples. The most common indications for requesting such analyses were suspected acute intoxication (46 %) and suspected therapeutic failure/adverse drug reaction (31 %). 88 % of the serum samples obtained for acute intoxications were positive, and 48 different substances were detected. The substances most often found were various benzodiazepines, various antiepileptic drugs, ethanol, carisoprodol, lithium, and other psychotropic drugs. In urine, amphetamine and zopiclone were the substances most often detected. Interpretation. The service seems to be used according to its intentions, and the high number of samples received indicate that clinicians consider the service to be useful. An early and continuous dialogue between the clinician and the laboratory physician is a prerequisite for rational use of the service.
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- author
- Helland, Arne
; Espnes, Ketil Arne
; Reimers, Arne
LU
; Aamo, Trond ; Zahlsen, Kolbjørn ; Rygnestad, Tarjei and Spigset, Olav
- alternative title
- Toxicological screening of medicines and drugs of abuse in emergency cases
- publishing date
- 2008-01-03
- type
- Contribution to journal
- publication status
- published
- subject
- in
- Tidsskrift for den Norske Laegeforening
- volume
- 128
- issue
- 1
- pages
- 42 - 45
- publisher
- Den norske legeforening
- external identifiers
-
- scopus:38349098663
- pmid:18183057
- ISSN
- 0029-2001
- language
- Norwegian
- LU publication?
- no
- id
- 141a9c13-9b80-40d9-b7c6-b0a52fd334bb
- date added to LUP
- 2024-08-31 14:57:16
- date last changed
- 2025-04-13 13:01:53
@article{141a9c13-9b80-40d9-b7c6-b0a52fd334bb, abstract = {{<p>Background. In some situations, and particularly when intoxications are suspected, it would be advantageous if medicines and drugs of abuse could be swiftly detected in serum or urine. Material and methods. The Department of Clinical Pharmacology at St. Olav University Hospital has since 2004 been developing a comprehensive toxicology service (at all hours 7-days/week) for immediate quantitative analysis of between 80 and 90 substances. We here present the service in further detail and evaluate its usefulness during its first full year, 2005. Two case reports are presented to further illustrate the possible benefits of this service. Results. Urgent testing was requested for a total of 390 samples; 351 serum and 39 urine samples. The most common indications for requesting such analyses were suspected acute intoxication (46 %) and suspected therapeutic failure/adverse drug reaction (31 %). 88 % of the serum samples obtained for acute intoxications were positive, and 48 different substances were detected. The substances most often found were various benzodiazepines, various antiepileptic drugs, ethanol, carisoprodol, lithium, and other psychotropic drugs. In urine, amphetamine and zopiclone were the substances most often detected. Interpretation. The service seems to be used according to its intentions, and the high number of samples received indicate that clinicians consider the service to be useful. An early and continuous dialogue between the clinician and the laboratory physician is a prerequisite for rational use of the service.</p>}}, author = {{Helland, Arne and Espnes, Ketil Arne and Reimers, Arne and Aamo, Trond and Zahlsen, Kolbjørn and Rygnestad, Tarjei and Spigset, Olav}}, issn = {{0029-2001}}, language = {{nor}}, month = {{01}}, number = {{1}}, pages = {{42--45}}, publisher = {{Den norske legeforening}}, series = {{Tidsskrift for den Norske Laegeforening}}, title = {{Legemiddel- og rusmiddelanalyser som øyeblikkelig hjelp}}, volume = {{128}}, year = {{2008}}, }