English | Русский
logo

Harm Reduction - Treatment & Care (medical)

Search for
Search in

Questions

In Progress

ID Question Subject Answer
1878 English Russian A patient’s decision to refuse methadone substitution therapy No answer yet
1934 English Russian About methadone No answer yet
1753 English Russian Alcoholism and new treatment methods No answer yet
1721 English Russian Disposal methods No answer yet
1956 English Russian Drug use No answer yet

Total number: 15 ( More )

Answered

ID Question Subject Answer
1967 Russian Вакцина БЦЖ Russian
1970 Russian АРВ и Метадон Russian
1643 English Russian What websites are there about methadone? Russian
1959 English Russian Vaccine for HIV-infection Russian
260 English Russian Typical symptoms of drug overdose English Russian

Total number: 128 ( More )

Publications

Title Authors Publication Page(s) Link / File
Methadone maintenance therapy versus no opioid replacement therapy for opioid dependence. Mattick RP, Breen C, Kimber J, Davoli M. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2009 Jul 8;(3):CD002209. (3):CD002209.
English : Link
BACKGROUND: Methadone maintenance was the first widely used opioid replacement therapy to treat heroin dependence, and it remains the best-researched treatment for this problem. Despite the widespread use of methadone in maintenance treatment for opioid dependence in many countries, it is a controversial treatment whose effectiveness has been disputed. OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the effects of methadone maintenance treatment (MMT) compared with treatments that did not involve opioid replacement therapy (i.e., detoxification, offer of drug-free rehabilitation, placebo medication, wait-list controls) for opioid dependence. SEARCH STRATEGY: We searched the following databases up to Dec 2008: the Cochrane Controlled Trials Register, EMBASE, PubMED, CINAHL, Current Contents, Psychlit, CORK [www. state.vt.su/adap/cork], Alcohol and Drug Council of Australia (ADCA) [www.adca.org.au], Australian Drug Foundation (ADF-VIC) [www.adf.org.au], Centre for Education and Information on Drugs and Alcohol (CEIDA) [www.ceida.net.au], Australian Bibliographic Network (ABN), and Library of Congress databases, available NIDA monographs and the College on Problems of Drug Dependence Inc. proceedings, the reference lists of all identified studies and published reviews; authors of identified RCTs were asked about other published or unpublished relevant RCTs. SELECTION CRITERIA: All randomised controlled clinical trials of methadone maintenance therapy compared with either placebo maintenance or other non-pharmacological therapy for the treatment of opioid dependence. DATA COLLECTION AND ANALYSIS: Reviewers evaluated the papers separately and independently, rating methodological quality of sequence generation, concealment of allocation and bias. Data were extracted independently for meta-analysis and double-entered. MAIN RESULTS: Eleven studies met the criteria for inclusion in this review, all were randomised clinical trials, two were double-blind. There were a total number of 1969 participants. The sequence generation was inadequate in one study, adequate in five studies and unclear in the remaining studies. The allocation of concealment was adequate in three studies and unclear in the remaining studies. Methadone appeared statistically significantly more effective than non-pharmacological approaches in retaining patients in treatment and in the suppression of heroin use as measured by self report and urine/hair analysis (6 RCTs, RR = 0.66 95% CI 0.56-0.78), but not statistically different in criminal activity (3 RCTs, RR=0.39; 95%CI: 0.12-1.25) or mortality (4 RCTs, RR=0.48; 95%CI: 0.10-2.39). AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Methadone is an effective maintenance therapy intervention for the treatment of heroin dependence as it retains patients in treatment and decreases heroin use better than treatments that do not utilise opioid replacement therapy. It does not show a statistically significant superior effect on criminal activity or mortality.
Pulmonary Complications of Drug Abuse Leon S. Gottlieb, MD and Thomas C. Boylen, MD West J Med. 8–16.
English : Link
Complications resulting from drug abuse more frequently affect the lung than any other organ. The spectrum of pulmonary complications associated with drug abuse is wide. The current practice of using mixtures of drugs is mainly responsible for the increase in pulmonary complications. The chief complications observed in a series of 241 drug abuse patients were aspiration pneumonitis (12.9 percent), pulmonary edema (10.0 percent), and pneumonia (7.5 percent).