ASAM Pocket Guidelines and Patient Guide

Stimulant Use Disorder

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21 68. Alternative agents (eg, calcium channel blockers, vasodilators) are generally preferred for management of cardiac ischemia in patients experiencing stimulant intoxication. However, if beta blockers are used in patients with stimulant intoxication, clinicians should consider using a medication with concomitant alpha-1 antagonism (eg, carvedilol, labetalol). If an unopposed beta blocker was used in a patient who is or was recently stimulant intoxicated, clinicians should also consider providing a coronary vasodilator (eg, nitroglycerin, calcium channel blocker). For complex cases, consult with cardiology and/or toxicology (L-C). 69. While treating underlying stimulant intoxication in patients experiencing chest pain, clinicians should concomitantly evaluate for ACS and other causes of acute chest pain in stimulant intoxication (eg, pulmonary, musculoskeletal [MSK]). Chest pain that does not fully resolve as signs and symptoms of stimulant intoxication improve should be evaluated and treated following current standards of care (M-S). QRS Widening 70. Cocaine has local anesthetic-like effects at sodium channels and can cause QRS widening with impairment in cardiac contractility during severe cocaine intoxication. If these issues are identified, in addition to treating intoxication, clinicians should administer sodium bicarbonate to improve the conduction block and contractility; this will also improve metabolic acidosis if present (H-S). Seizure 71. When a patient presents to the emergency department (ED) with seizures following stimulant use, full neurological workup is not necessary if the seizures are well explained by substance use or withdrawal (CC-C). a. When the etiolog y of the seizures is not well explained by stimulant use, the workup and management of seizures should proceed according to usual best practices (CC-S). 72. For stimulant intoxication-related seizures or concomitant alcohol- or sedative-related seizures, clinicians should treat with benzodiazepines (H-S). a. If seizures are refractory to benzodiazepines, clinicians can consider treating with either phenobarbital or propofol (H-S). Follow-up 73. Clinicians should screen patients for StUD and engage them in brief interventions using motivational interviewing (MI) or motivational enhancement therapy (MET) to facilitate referral for assessment for StUD, if indicated (VL-C).

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