RANDOMIZED,
DOUBLE-BLIND, PLACEBO-CONTROLLED TRIAL OF DIAZEPAM, NITROGLYCERIN, OR BOTH FOR
TREATMENT OF PATIENTS WITH POTENTIAL COCAINE-ASSOCIATED ACUTE CORONARY
SYNDROMES
Baumann,
B. et al. Academic Emergency Medicine
Volume 7, Number 8 878-885
INTRODUCTION:
To the authors' knowledge, treatment of patients with cocaine-associated acute
coronary syndromes has not been rigorously investigated in symptomatic
patients.
OBJECTIVE:
To perform a randomized double-blind trial of diazepam, nitroglycerin, or both
for treatment of patients with potential cocaine-associated acute coronary
syndromes.
METHODS:
Patients with potential cocaine-associated acute coronary syndromes were
randomized to treatment with either diazepam, nitroglycerin, or both every 5 minutes
or until symptom resolution. Outcomes were chest pain resolution (measured by
visual analog scale), and changes in blood pressure, pulse rate, cardiac output
(L/min), cardiac index (L/min/m2), stroke volume (mL/beat), and stroke index
(mL/beat/m2) over the 15-minute treatment period. To adjust for seven outcomes
using the Bonferroni correction, alpha was set at 0.007.
RESULTS:
Forty patients were enrolled (diazepam, 12; nitroglycerin, 13; both, 15).
Patients had a mean age (±SD) of 35.4 (±7.5) years; 75% were male. They
presented a mean of 5 hours and 37 minutes after cocaine use. Baseline
demographics, cocaine use patterns, chest pain characteristics, and initial
electrocardiograms were similar for all groups. Chest pain severity improved
similarly in the three groups [-33.3 mm (±8.0); -30.7 mm (±7.1); -33.0 mm
(±7.9); p = 0.6]. The stroke index decreased during the 15-minute treatment
period for all groups (diazepam, -8.7 (±3.3); nitroglycerin, -3.1 ± 2.8; both,
-1.8 (±3.1) mL/beat/m2; p = 0.03). After aadjustment for differences between
baseline hemodynamic and cardiac profiles and multiple comparisons, there was
no difference in any response to therapy over time for the different
treatments.
CONCLUSIONS:
For treatment of patients with potential cocaine-associated acute coronary
syndromes, chest pain resolutions and changes in cardiac performance are not
different in patients treated with diazepam or nitroglycerin. In this study,
the use of both agents did not offer any advantage over either agent
alone.