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- From: tomkaye@galaxy.galstar.com (Tom Kaye)
- Newsgroups: alt.drugs
- Subject: Inhalant dangers/Info
- Date: 5 Mar 1995 22:13:24 GMT
- Message-ID: <3jdd25$d1o@mercury.galstar.com>
-
- Newsgroups: alt.drugs
- Subject: Re: Inhalant Dangers
- Date: 26 Feb 1995 01:01:51 -0500
- Additional reading materials
-
-
- This is posted to help inform those who are curious about the
- dangers of inhalants.
-
- "The Breath of Death"
-
- "Killers of the young"
-
- Tom Kaye RPh.
- Tomkaye@galstar.com
- Compuserve 76074.207
- Phone 918-455- 9450
-
-
-
- Research
- Publication # 129
- National Institutes on Drug Abuse
- 1992
- Charles S. Sharp
- Neal Rosenburg M.D.
- 5600 Fishers lane
- Rockville, MD 20857
-
- Additional info
- Cathy McIntyre
- c/o International Institute of Inhalant abuse
- fax: 303-788-1860
- Phone: 1-800-832-5090
- Mention my name Tom Kaye and they will give you full coorporation.
-
- The key points to instil to kids are:
- 1. Inhalants are different from other drugs.
- 2. Inhlants rank numer 4 in popularity for use
- 3. Inhalants cause then most body damage when compared to all the other drugs.
- 4. Inhalants may kill the first time when used.
- 5. There are over 1400 inhalant products that kids can use to
- get high.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- *****ARCHIVES OF DISEASE IN CHILDHOOD*****
-
-
- Esmail A Meyer L Pottier A Wright S
- Deaths from volatile substance abuse in those under 18 years: results
- from a national epidemiological study.
-
- In: Arch Dis Child (1993 Sep) 69(3):356-60
-
- The epidemiology of deaths from volatile substance abuse (VSA) in
- those under 18 years that occurred in the UK from 1981-90 is
- described. The analysis of deaths is based on a national register,
- which has information obtained from a regular survey of coroners, the
- Office of Population Censuses and Surveys, and a press clippings
- agency. Altogether 605 people under 18 died from VSA during this
- period. Seventy per cent of deaths occurred between the ages of 14
- and 16. The largest number of deaths were attributed to butane gas
- lighter refills. There was a large north-south gradient in age
- specific mortality ratios (Scotland 180, south east England 87) and
- nearly four times as many deaths occurred in social class V compared
- with social class I. Deaths from VSA are an important and preventable
- cause of deaths in those under 18. Strategies aimed at prevention
- should include measures to reduce experimentation, intervention to
- reduce socioeconomic deprivation, and health education campaigns
- aimed at schools and parents.
-
- Institutional address:
- Department of Public Health Sciences
- St George's Hospital Medical School
- London.
-
-
- *****ARCHIVES OF INTERNAL MEDICINE*****
-
-
- Cartwright TR Brown ED Brashear RE
- Pulmonary infiltrates following butane 'fire-breathing'.
-
- In: Arch Intern Med (1983 Oct) 143(10):2007-8
-
- Rapidly progressive bilateral pulmonary infiltrates occurred in a 19-
- year-old man following an unusual hydrocarbon abuse. The acute
- illness was the result of a "trick" known as "fire-breathing." Fire-
- breathing involves filling the oral cavity with butane gas, from an
- ordinary butane cigarette/cigar lighter, and exhalation of the
- volatile vapors over an open flame producing a flame-throwing effect.
- Because of the pulmonary toxic reaction, this activity could have a
- serious or even fatal outcome.
-
-
- *****BMJ*****
-
- Anderson HR
- Increase in deaths from deliberate inhalation of fuel gases and
- pressurised aerosols [letter]
-
- In: BMJ (1990 Jul 7) 301(6742):41
-
- [No Abstract Available]
-
- (REFERENCE 4 OF 25)
- 93006467
-
- Esmail A Anderson HR Ramsey JD Taylor J Pottier A
- Controlling deaths from volatile substance abuse in under 18s: the
- effects of legislation [see comments]
-
- In: BMJ (1992 Sep 19) 305(6855):692
- [No Abstract Available]
-
- Institutional address:
- Department of Public Health Sciences
- St George's Hospital
- Medical School
- London.
-
-
- *****EMERGENCY MEDICINE CLINICS OF NORTH AMERICA*****
- Linden CH
- Volatile substances of abuse.
-
- In: Emerg Med Clin North Am (1990 Aug) 8(3):559-78
-
- Substances that are inhaled for the purpose of recreational self-
- intoxication include aliphatic hydrocarbons, alkyl halides, alkyl
- nitrites, aromatic hydrocarbons, ethers, and ketones. All have the
- ability to cause asphyxia, arrhythmias, cardiovascular depression,
- neurologic dysfunction, and mucosal, pulmonary, and skin irritation
- following acute exposure and permanent neurologic damage with chronic
- exposure. The acute effects of alkyl halides and alkyl nitrites also
- include carbon monoxide poisoning and hepatorenal toxicity, and
- methemoglobinemia, respectively. Chronic exposure to aromatic
- hydrocarbons and ketones can result in liver, kidney, and bone marrow
- injury; myopathy, rhabdomyolysis, metabolic acidosis, and electrolyte
- abnormalities are further complications of chronic aromatic
- hydrocarbon inhalation.
-
- Institutional address:
- Department of Emergency Medicine
- University of Massachusetts Medical Center
- Worcester.
-
-
- *****JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY OF MEDICINE*****
-
-
- D'Costa DF Gunasekera NP
- Fatal cerebral of edema following trichloroethane abuse.
-
- In: J R Soc Med (1990 Aug) 83(8):533-4
-
- [No Abstract Available]
-
- Institutional address:
- Department of Medicine
- General Hospital
- Kettering
- Northants.
-
- *****JAMA*****
-
- King GS Smialek JE Troutman WG
- Sudden death in adolescents resulting from the inhalation of
- typewriter correction fluid.
-
- In: JAMA (1985 Mar 15) 253(11):1604-6
-
- Inhalation abuse of various toxic agents continues to be a
- significant health problem among the younger segment of our society.
- We describe four cases of sudden death in adolescents associated with
- recreational sniffing of typewriter correction fluid occurring during
- the period 1979 through mid-1984. The solvents used in most of these
- fluids, 1,1,1-trichloroethane and trichloroethylene, are known to
- induce potentially fatal arrhythmias. Sniffing typewriter correction
- fluid poses a significant and underappreciated danger to the lives of
- these abusers. School health officials, public health departments,
- and law enforcement personnel should be alerted to the need for
- surveillance of this type of activity.
-
-
- *****LANCET*****
-
- (REFERENCE 8 OF 25)
- 89158540
-
- Gunn J Wilson J Mackintosh AF
- Butane sniffing causing ventricular fibrillation [letter]
-
- In: Lancet (1989 Mar 18) 1(8638):617
-
- [No Abstract Available]
-
-
- *****NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE*****
-
- Siegel E Wason S
- Sudden death caused by inhalation of butane and propane [letter]
-
- In: N Engl J Med (1990 Dec 6) 323(23):1638
-
- [No Abstract Available]
-
- *****SOUTHERN MEDICAL JOURNAL*****
-
- Wegener EE Barraza KR Das SK
- Severe frostbite caused by Freon gas.
-
- In: South Med J (1991 Sep) 84(9):1143-6
-
- We have reported a case of severe frostbite due to direct exposure to
- liquid Freon gas (monochlorodifluoromethane), a fluorinated
- hydrocarbon widely used as refrigerants, propellants, and industrial
- solvents. The patient was treated for severe third- and fourth-degree
- frostbite to the hand. The severity of the injury was apparently the
- result of direct through-and-through injury from exposure to the
- liquid (boiling point -40.5 degrees C) and a possible systemic
- vasoconstrictive effect on arterial smooth muscle due to inhalation
- of Freon gas.
-
- Institutional address:
- Department of Surgery
- University of Mississippi Medical Center
- Jackson 39216-4505.
-
-
-
-
- *****ARUKORU KENKYU-TO YAKUBUTSU ISON JAPANESE JOURNAL OF ALCOHOL STUDIES*****
-
-
-
- Tohhara S Tani N Nakajima T Tsuda E
- [Clinical study of butane gas abuse: in comparison with toluene-based
- solvent and marihuana]
-
- In: Arukoru Kenkyuto Yakubutsu Ison (1989 Dec) 24(6):504-10
- (Published in Japanese)
-
- We reported 2 cases of patients who abused butane gas, toluene-based
- solvent and marihuana. They showed different signs in the each
- substance, respectively. Butane gas was easier to make visual
- hallucinations and distorted perception of body form, and was less
- potent and addictive than toluene-based solvent. Spontaneous laughter
- and the most amotivational state were characterized by marihuana
- intoxication. Alteration of auditory perception that simple music
- sounded wonderful was also experienced. Furthermore, the above
- symptoms were thought to change by the order of taking the substance.
- Therefore, it is needed to examine the order of the use of drugs and
- clarify differences of symptoms in abuse among drugs, respectively.
-
- *****BURNS*****
-
-
- Scerri GV Regan PJ Ratcliffe RJ Roberts AH
- Burns following cigarette lighter fluid abuse.
-
- In: Burns (1992 Aug) 18(4):329-31
-
- Seven patients with burns associated with butane cigarette lighter
- fluid abuse, in a group setting within an enclosed space, are
- presented. In all patients there was a reluctance to admit that
- butane vapour was in use as an intoxicant immediately prior to the
- injury. It is obvious from the circumstances of these injuries that
- the hazardous nature of cigarette lighter fluid is not fully
- appreciated. Since the resultant injuries are usually minor (all
- patients recovered spontaneously with conservative management, the
- hospital stay averaging 2 days), it is probable that many more occur,
- but do not present to accident departments as the victims are wary of
- repercussions should they admit to intoxicant vapour abuse. In view
- of the medical sequelae that can follow butane inhalation, burns unit
- staff should be aware of the problems, their recognition and
- treatment.
-
- Institutional address:
- Nuffield Burns Units
- Stoke Mandeville Hospital
- Aylesbury
- Buckinghamshire
- UK.
-
-
- *****CHEMICAL DEPENDENCIES*****
-
- Russe BR McCoy CB Barton JE
- Recent findings concerning inhalant use.
-
- In: Chem Depend (1980) 4(1-2):113-26
-
- [No Abstract Available]
-
-
- *****HUMAN TOXICOLOGY*****
-
-
- Marjot R McLeod AA
- Chronic non-neurological toxicity from volatile substance abuse.
-
- In: Hum Toxicol (1989 Jul) 8(4):301-6
-
- 1. Most of the evidence for chronic non-neurological toxicity from
- volatile substance abuse is derived from case reports. 2. Factors
- important in assessing these reports are the marked variations in
- exposure conditions and in the composition of the products abused. 3.
- In a young and otherwise healthy population, any chronic organ
- toxicity arising from VSA has to be gross in order to become
- clinically apparent. This may partially explain the relatively low
- incidence of reporting. 4. Toluene and the chlorinated hydrocarbons
- 1,1,1-trichloroethane and trichloroethylene can cause permanent
- damage to the kidney, liver, heart and lung, in certain volatile
- substance abusers.
-
- Institutional address:
- Department of Anaesthetics
- Kings College Hospital
- Denmark Hill
- London
- UK.
-
-
- Ramsey J Anderson HR Bloor K Flanagan RJ
- An introduction to the practice, prevalence and chemical toxicology
- of volatile substance abuse.
-
- In: Hum Toxicol (1989 Jul) 8(4):261-9
-
- 1. Volatile substance abuse is largely a teenage practice; it is
- estimated that in the UK 3.5-10% of young people have at least
- experimented and that 0.5-1% are current users. 2. The products
- abused are many and varied but only about 20 chemical compounds,
- notably toluene, chlorinated solvents such as 1,1,1-trichloroethane,
- fuel gases such as butane and aerosol propellants, are commonly
- encountered. 3. The acute hazard varies with the compound, product
- and mode of abuse. Mortality in the UK is now about 100 per year,
- from all social classes, 90% of whom are male. 4. Chronic toxicity is
- difficult to assess, partly because of the diversity of products
- abused. However it is clear that some long-term abusers suffer
- permanent damage to the central nervous system, heart, liver and
- kidney. 5. Toxicological analysis may be relied upon for confirmation
- of diagnosis, providing attention is paid to the kinetics of
- excretion and stability in the sample. 6. Responses include codes of
- practice for the sale of products and educational strategies;
- legislation has also been enacted. There is little evidence that any
- of these measures have made a significant impact on the problem.
-
- Institutional address:
- Chemical Pathology Laboratory
- St George's Hospital Medical School
- Cranmer Terrace
- London
- UK.
-
-
- *****JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN VETERINARY MEDICAL ASSOCIATION*****
-
-
- *****JOURNAL OF OCCUPATIONAL MEDICINE*****
-
- Tauber JB
- Instant benzol death.
-
- In: J Occup Med (1970 Dec) 12(12):520-3
-
- [No Abstract Available]
-
-
- *****PSYCHIATRIC CLINICS OF NORTH AMERICA*****
-
-
- Cohen S
- The hallucinogens and the inhalants.
-
- In: Psychiatr Clin North Am (1984 Dec) 7(4):681-8
-
- The hallucinogenic drugs represent a recurrent outbreak pattern with
- each generation or two seeming to rediscover their ego-dissolving
- effects. The inhalants produce a short-lived intoxication with
- certain volatile solvents affecting specific organ systems.
-
-
- *****TOXICOLOGY AND APPLIED PHARMACOLOGY*****
-
-
- Bruckner JV Peterson RG
- Evaluation of toluene and acetone inhalant abuse. II. Model
- development and toxicology.
-
- In: Toxicol Appl Pharmacol (1981 Dec) 61(3):302-12
-
-
- Center for Substance Abuse Prevention
- Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration
- U. S. Public Health Service
- U. S. Department of Health and Human Services
- ---------
- for more information or assistance, contact ....
-
- The National Clearinghouse for Alcohol and Drug Information
- P.O. Box 2345
- Rockville, Maryland 20847
- 1-800-729-6686
-
-
-
- National High School Senior Survey
- ----------------------------------
-
- PERCENT WHO EVER USED
-
- CLASS OF 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990
-
- Marijuana/Hashish 58.7 57.0 54.9 54.2 50.9 50.2 47.2 43.7 40.7
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Inhalants 12.8 13.6 14.4 15.4 15.9 17.0 16.7 17.6 18.0
- Inhalants Adjusted* 17.7 18.2 18.0 18.1 20.1 18.6 17.5 18.6 18.5
- Amyl/Butyl Nitrites 9.8 8.4 8.1 7.9 8.6 4.7 3.2 3.3 2.1
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Hallicinogens 12.5 11.9 10.7 10.3 9.7 10.3 8.9 9.4 9.4
- Hallicinogens Adj** 14.3 13.6 12.3 12.1 11.9 10.6 9.2 9.9 9.7
- LSD 9.6 8.9 8.0 7.5 7.2 8.4 7.7 8.3 8.7
- PCP 6.0 5.6 5.0 4.9 4.8 3.0 2.9 3.9 2.8
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- *Inhalants ajusted for underreporting of amyl and butyl nitrites.
- **Hallucinogens adjusted for underreporting of PCP.
-
-
-
- PERCENT WHO EVER USED
- CLASS OF 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990
-
- Cocaine 16.0 16.2 16.1 17.3 16.9 15.2 12.1 10.3 9.4
- Crack NA NA NA NA NA 4.6 4.8 4.7 3.5
- Other Cocaine NA NA NA NA NA 14.0 12.1 8.5 8.6
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Heroin 1.2 1.2 1.3 1.2 1.1 1.2 1.1 1.3 1.3
- Other Opiates 9.6 9.4 9.7 10.2 9.0 9.2 8.6 8.3 8.3
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Stimulants 35.6 35.4 NA NA NA NA NA NA NA
- Stimulants Adj* 27.9 26.9 27.9 26.2 23.4 21.6 19.8 19.1 17.5
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Sedatives 15.2 14.4 13.3 11.8 10.4 8.7 7.8 7.4 5.3
- Barbiturates 10.3 9.9 9.9 9.2 8.4 7.4 6.7 6.5 6.8
- Methaqualone 10.7 10.1 8.3 6.7 5.2 4.0 3.3 2.7 2.3
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Tranquilizers 14.0 13.3 12.4 11.9 10.9 10.9 9.4 7.6 7.2
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- *Stimulants adjusted to exclude inappropriate reporting of
- nonprescription stimulants.
-
-
-
- PERCENT WHO EVER USED
- CLASS OF 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990
-
- Alcohol 92.8 92.6 92.6 92.2 91.3 92.2 92.0 90.7 89.5
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Cigarettes 70.1 70.6 69.7 68.8 67.6 67.2 66.4 65.7 64.4
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Term "Ever Used" refers to use of substance at least one time.
-
- This information was supplied by the U.S. Depratment of Health
- and Human Services, Public Health Service, Alcohol, Drug Abuse,
- and Mental Health Administration. Revised January, 1991.
-
- These numbers were gathered in annual nationwide surveys
- conducted for the National Institute of Drug Abuse by the
- University of Michigan Institute for Social Reseach. The 1990
- survey involved more than 15,000 seniors from public and private
- schools.
-
- The above data refer to use not under a doctor's orders.
-
-
- *****AMERICAN JOURNAL OF MEDICINE*****
-
-
- Haverkos HW Dougherty J
- Health hazards of nitrite inhalants.
-
- In: Am J Med (1988 Mar) 84(3 Pt 1):479-82
-
- [No Abstract Available]
-
- Institutional address:
- Clinical Medicine Branch
- National Institute on Drug Abuse
- Rockville
- Maryland 20857.
-
-
- *****BIOCHEMISTRY*****
-
-
- Gadella TW Jr Moritz A Westerman J Wirtz KW
- Enzymatic synthesis of pyrene-labeled polyphosphoinositides and their
- behavior in organic solvents and phosphatidylcholine bilayers.
-
- In: Biochemistry (1990 Apr 3) 29(13):3389-95
-
- A method is reported for the synthesis of pyrene-labeled analogues of
- phosphatidylinositol 4-phosphate (Pyr-PIP) and phosphatidylinositol
- 4,5-biphosphate (Pyr-PIP2) from sn-2-(pyrenyl-
- decanoyl)phosphatidylinositol (Pyr-PI) using partially purified PI
- and PIP kinase preparations. Phosphorylation of Pyr-PI and Pyr-PIP
- was extensive (more than 50%) provided that the ATP concentration was
- high and that stabilizing agents such as sucrose and polyethylene
- glycol were present in the incubation medium. Pyr-PIP and Pyr-PIP2
- were isolated by chromatography on immobilized neomycin. The identity
- of the products was established by thin-layer chromatography, UV-
- absorption spectroscopy, and spectrofluorometry. The pyrene
- excimer/monomer fluorescence technique revealed that, in contrast to
- Pyr-PI, Pyr-PIP and Pyr-PIP2 formed clusters in organic solvents. By
- use of the same technique for model membranes, it was shown that in
- phosphatidylcholine bilayers the collision frequency of the three
- fluorescent phosphoinositides decreased in the order PI greater than
- PIP greater than PIP2. Addition of Ca2+ at concentrations above 0.1
- mM increased the collision frequency of Pyr-PIP2 and, to a much
- lesser extent, Pyr-PIP; Ca2+ had no effect on Pyr-PI.
-
- Institutional address:
- Centre for Biomembranes and Lipid Enzymology
- State University of Utrecht
- The Netherlands.
-
-
- *****CANCER RESEARCH*****
-
-
- Armstrong RW Armstrong MJ Yu MC Henderson BE
- Salted fish and inhalants as risk factors for nasopharyngeal
- carcinoma in Malaysian Chinese.
-
- In: Cancer Res (1983 Jun) 43(6):2967-70
-
- We conducted a case-control study of nasopharyngeal carcinoma among
- Malaysian Chinese to test inhalants, salted fish consumption, and use
- of tobacco, alcohol, and nasal ointments as risk factors for the
- disease. Interviews with 100 cases and 100 controls indicated that
- salted fish consumption during childhood was a significant risk
- factor (relative risk, 3.0; p = 0.04); childhood daily consumption of
- this food item compared to nonconsumption carried a relative risk of
- 17.4 [95% confidence interval = (2.7, 111.1)]. Occupational exposure
- to smokes (relative risk, 6.0; p = 0.006) and to dusts (relative
- risk, 4.0; p less than 0.001) was also significantly associated with
- nasopharyngeal carcinoma. The two risk factors (consumption of salted
- fish and exposure to smoke and/or dust) were independent of each
- other. There was no association between nasopharyngeal carcinoma and
- tobacco, alcohol, or nasal ointments.
-
- Institutional address:
- School of Public Health
- University of Hawaii
- Honolulu.
-
-
- *****JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY*****
-
-
- Wallis KT Azhar S Rho MB Lewis SA Cowan NJ Murphy DB
- The mechanism of equilibrium binding of microtubule-associated
- protein 2 to microtubules. Binding is a multi-phasic process and
- exhibits positive cooperativity.
-
- In: J Biol Chem (1993 Jul 15) 268(20):15158-67
-
- The mechanism of binding of microtubule-associated protein 2 (MAP2)
- to taxol-stabilized microtubules (MTs) was examined through Scatchard
- analysis of equilibrium binding and by immunoelectron microscopy. We
- demonstrate the following. 1) Binding is a cooperative process as
- indicated by sigmoidal binding curves, prominent humps in Scatchard
- plots, and an all-or-none response in binding during ligand
- titrations. At high tubulin/MAP2 ratios, the Kd for noncontiguous
- binding (5-25 microM) is estimated to be 100-1500 times greater than
- that predicted for contiguous binding, suggesting a high degree of
- cooperativity. 2) Cooperativity is indicated independently by a
- highly clustered or patchy distribution of MAP2 on MTs as revealed by
- immunoelectron microscopy. 3) The binding of truncated constructs of
- mouse MAP2 protein suggests that a domain of MAP2 conferring
- cooperativity is located in or near the MT binding site near the
- carboxyl terminus. We speculate that in the cell, cooperativity may
- generate MTs with uniform biochemical properties and contribute to
- the segregation of MAPs in neuronal cell processes.
-
- Institutional address:
- Department of Cell Biology and Anatomy
- Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
- Baltimore
- Maryland 21205.
-
-
- *****JOURNAL OF NEUROSURGERY*****
-
-
- Spigelman MK Zappulla RA Johnson J Goldsmith SJ Malis LI
- Holland JF
- Etoposide-induced blood-brain barrier disruption. Effect of drug
- compared with that of solvents.
-
- In: J Neurosurg (1984 Oct) 61(4):674-8
-
- The intracarotid infusion of the anti-neoplastic compound, etoposide,
- has been shown to exert a dose-dependent effect on blood-brain
- barrier (BBB) permeability. Etoposide, however, is formulated in a
- complex solvent solution containing alcohol, Tween 80, polyethylene
- glycol 300, and citric acid. To investigate the contribution of the
- solvent solution to BBB disruption, the authors studied Sprague-
- Dawley rats after the internal carotid artery infusion of the solvent
- solution with and without the addition of etoposide. Experiments were
- performed at four doses of drug and/or solvent. Disruption of the BBB
- was evaluated qualitatively by the appearance of the systemically
- administered dye, Evans blue, in the cerebral hemispheres and
- quantitatively by the ratio of gamma counts of the technetium-labeled
- chelate of diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid (99mTc-DTPA) in the
- ipsilateral:contralateral hemisphere. Significant barrier opening was
- obtained in all four groups of animals infused with solvent plus
- etoposide. In the corresponding groups of rats infused with the
- solvent solution alone, BBB disruption was markedly lower. Only in
- the group infused with the largest dose of solvent was the
- hemispheric ratio of 99mTc-DTPA significantly different from saline-
- infused animals. Each of the groups with solvent plus etoposide had
- 99mTc-DTPA ratios significantly different from the control group.
- Intracarotid infusion and subsequent BBB disruption were well
- tolerated by the animals receiving either solvent alone or solvent
- and etoposide. Disruption of the BBB secondary to the intracarotid
- infusion of etoposide is primarily caused by the drug itself and not
- by the solvent solution.
-
- Institutional address:
- Department of Neoplastic Diseases
- Mount Sinai School of Medicine
- New York
- New York.
-
-
-
-
- *****ADVANCES IN BIOCHEMICAL PSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY*****
-
- (REFERENCE 6 OF 22)
- 88291911
-
- Haverkos HW
- Kaposi's sarcoma and nitrite inhalants.
-
- In: Adv Biochem Psychopharmacol (1988) 44:165-72
-
- [No Abstract Available]
-
- Institutional address:
- Clinical Medicine Branch
- National Institute on Drug Abuse
- Alcohol
- Drug Abuse
- Rockville
- Maryland 20857.
-
-
- *****AKAD WISS*****
-
-
- Horn KH
- [LIMITS AND POSSIBILITIES OF ANIMAL EXPERIMENTS WITH CARCINOGENIC
- INHALANTS]
-
- In: Akad Wiss (1978)(2):52-62 (Published in German)
-
- Animal inhalation studies with chemical carcinogens or cocarcinogens
- are reviewed and their relevance to cancer induction in humans is
- discussed. Current inhalation techniques are not completely reliable
- due to the short life span of the test animals (eg, rats and Syrian
- golden hamsters) and the long observation periods needed to
- approximate human exposures. With the development of more
- sophisticated inhalation equipment, more positive results may be
- obtained with definite carcinogens. Another difficulty with the
- inhalation method is the evaluation of a positive result; ie, whether
- a substance such as ferric trioxide is carcinogenic, cocarcinogenic,
- or causes cytopathological conditions that promote development.
- Intratracheal intubation and implantation techniques are more
- accurate in the production of respiratory tract tumors, and they are
- useful in screening possible carcinogenic inhalants. The system
- application method is adequate only when testing a known carcinogen
- whose activity (po or sc) is organ-specific in the test species.
- However, this technique is useful in that the exact dose can be
- applied and the synergistic and/or cocarcinogenic properties of the
- test substance can be ascertained. To relate respiratory tract
- carcinogenesis in man to animal experiments will require the
- perfection of application techniques and the identification of more
- suitable animal models. (61 Refs)
-
- Institutional address:
- No affiliation given
-
-
-
- *****AMERICAN JOURNAL OF INDUSTRIAL MEDICINE*****
-
-
- Park RM Silverstein MA Green MA Mirer FE
- Brain cancer mortality at a manufacturer of aerospace
- electromechanical systems.
-
- In: Am J Ind Med (1990) 17(5):537-52
-
- Standardized proportional mortality ratios and mortality odds ratios
- were calculated for 583 deaths between 1950 and 1986 among employees
- who had worked for at least 10 years at a facility manufacturing
- missile and aircraft guidance systems. There was a statistically
- significant excess of brain cancer proportional mortality (PMR =
- 16/3.8 = 4.2, p = .0001). Among hourly employees, 12 brain cancer
- deaths occurred for 2.7 expected (PMR = 4.4, p = .00005). The PMR for
- brain cancer increased from 1.8 (p = .45) among hourly workers with
- less than 20 years to 8.7 (p = .000003) in those with more than 20
- years employment. Work in "clean rooms," where gyroscopes were
- assembled, was associated with the brain cancer excess but did not
- fully account for it. Among 105 deceased hourly women, all three
- brain cancer deaths occurred among gyro assemblers working in clean
- rooms, and the risk increased with duration in clean rooms. Although
- the proportion of brain cancer deaths among hourly men with clean-
- room experience was similar to that for women, only three of the
- seven male brain cancer deaths occurred in this group. The suspect
- agents include gyro fluids and chlorofluorocarbon solvents.
-
- Institutional address:
- Health and Safety Department
- United Auto Workers International Union
- Detroit
- MI 48214.
-
-
- *****ANNALS OF THE NEW YORK ACADEMY OF SCIENCES*****
-
-
- Zimmerman HM
- PRODUCTION OF BRAIN TUMORS WITH AROMATIC HYDROCARBONS
-
- In: Ann N Y Acad Sci (1982) 381:320-324
-
- This contribution constitutes a summary review of 40 years of work in
- the experimental production of gliomas in mice with the chemical
- carcinogens 20-methylcholanthrene, benzpyrene, and 1,2,5,6-
- dibenzanthracene, all three aromatic hydrocarbons. Frequent notation
- is made of the pertinence of the experimental results to the glioma
- problems in man. (Author abstract) (17 Refs)
-
- Institutional address:
- Montefiore Hosp. and Medical Center
- 111 East 210th St.
- Bronx
- NY
- 10467
-
-
- *****ANNUAL REVIEW OF PHARMACOLOGY AND TOXICOLOGY*****
-
- (
- Dahl AR Lewis JL
- Respiratory tract uptake of inhalants and metabolism of xenobiotics.
-
- In: Annu Rev Pharmacol Toxicol (1993) 33:383-407
-
- The combined impact of new research regarding the dosimetry of
- inhalants, discussed in early paragraphs of this review, and the
- rapidly developing knowledge regarding the location and substrate
- specificities of the enzymes responsible for xenobiotic metabolism
- should soon lead to new insights into the causes and prevention of
- cancer and other diseases of the respiratory tract and may provide
- insight into the design of drugs used in the treatment of respiratory
- tract disease. Among the developments to be expected within the next
- decade are the following: 1. The issue of extrapulmonary versus
- intrapulmonary activation of lung prodrugs and protoxicants will be
- resolved by validation of the different dosimetries predicted for
- highly lipophilic inhalants compared to less lipophilic ones. 2. The
- possibly complex roles of P450 isozymes 1A1 and 2D6 and other forms
- in the causation of human lung cancer will undoubtedly be better
- understood in the next few years. 3. Interspecies comparisons of
- respiratory tract enzyme activities--both activating and detoxicating-
- -will lead to improved use of laboratory animals as models for
- expected toxicological and pharmacological effects in humans. 4. The
- potential role of nasal uptake and metabolism in causing brain
- disease will be established or denied experimentally. 5. The complex
- relationships between host factors--such as hormone levels and the
- presence of inflammation--and metabolism-mediated toxicity will
- become clearer. 6. As new research results continue to illuminate the
- complexities of the interactions of xenobiotics with respiratory
- tract tissue, clues as to how best to administer drugs via the
- respiratory tract and understanding of changes in disease patterns--
- such as the recent shift in sites for lung cancer--will follow.
-
- Institutional address:
- Inhalation Toxicology Research Institute
- Albuquerque
- New Mexico 87185.
-
-
- *****BIOCHEMICAL PHARMACOLOGY*****
-
-
-
- Juorio AV Yu PH
- Effects of benzene and other organic solvents on the decarboxylation
- of some brain aromatic-L-amino acids.
-
- In: Biochem Pharmacol (1985 May 1) 34(9):1381-7
-
- The intraperitoneal administration of benzene produced marked
- increases in mouse striatal concentrations of beta-phenylethylamine,
- p-tyramine and, to a lesser extent, m-tyramine. Similar increases
- were observed in rat striatal p- and m-tyramine. The subcutaneous
- administration of benzene dissolved in sesame oil increased mouse
- striatal p-tyramine but did not change m-tyramine. Benzene
- administration to mice pretreated with p-tyrosine produced marked
- increases in mouse striatal p-tyramine as well as in m-tyramine. The
- statistical analysis of the results indicated that the treatment
- produced an interaction that led to an increase in the concentration
- of both the p- and m-isomers of tyramine. The administration of
- benzene to m-tyrosine-pretreated mice increased striatal m-tyramine
- but p-tyramine was not increased. The treatment produced no
- potentiation in the formation of p- or m-tyramine. Of the other
- organic solvents given, pyridine produced the most marked effects.
- Its administration increased the concentration of both p- and m-
- tyramine in the mouse striatum. Treatment with toluene, chloroform,
- carbon tetrachloride or isoamylalcohol produced moderate increases in
- mouse striatal p-tyramine while toluene, dichloromethane or
- isobutylalcohol also increased m-tyramine. These increases in brain
- beta-phenylethylamine, p-tyramine and m-tyramine may play a
- contributory role in the human toxicity of benzene and some of these
- organic solvents; these toxic effects could be exacerbated after
- ingestion of foodstuffs containing the aminoacids phenylalanine or p-
- tyrosine or for those under treatment with a monoamine oxidase
- inhibitor.
-
- Institutional address:
- Psychiatric Research Division
- Saskatchewan Health
- Saskatoon
- Canada.
-
-
- *****CARCINOGENESIS*****
-
-
- Moser GJ Smart RC
- Hepatic tumor-promoting chlorinated hydrocarbons stimulate protein
- kinase C activity.
-
- In: Carcinogenesis (1989 May) 10(5):851-6
-
- Various chlorinated hydrocarbons, many of which are known hepatic
- tumor promoters, have been evaluated for their ability to stimulate
- protein kinase C (PKC) activity in vitro. Chlordane, kepone,
- toxaphene, heptachlor, 2,2-bis(4-chlorophenyl)-1,1-dichloroethane,
- the polychlorinated biphenyl Aroclor 1254, aldrin, 2,2-bis(4-
- chlorophenyl)-1,1,1-trichloroethane (DDT) and gamma-
- hexachlorocyclohexane (lindane) were the most potent stimulators of
- PKC activity. Of these compounds, chlordane was the most potent
- organochlorine pesticide. Chlordane (100 microM) stimulated mouse
- brain PKC activity in the 10(5) g supernatant to a maximum velocity
- equal to that obtained when the enzyme was maximally stimulated with
- the skin-tumor-promoting phorbol ester, 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-
- acetate (TPA). Chlordane concentrations as low as 1 microM
- significantly stimulated PKC activity. Chlordane-stimulated PKC
- activity was calcium-dependent, and in the presence of exogenous
- calcium, chlordane-stimulated PKC activity was at least 5-fold
- greater than in the absence of added calcium. In contrast, the
- addition of calcium only minimally affected (less than 30% increase)
- the TPA-stimulated PKC activity. Concentrations of TPA and chlordane
- which maximally stimulate PKC did not produce an additive effect on
- PKC activity. Chlordane- and TPA- stimulated PKC activity was
- phospholipid-dependent and could be inhibited by quercetin, a known
- inhibitor of PKC activity. Chlordane in the presence of calcium also
- stimulated mouse epidermal and hepatic PKC as well as purified rat
- brain PKC. These results demonstrate that a wide variety of
- chlorinated hydrocarbons, which are considered hepatic tumor
- promoters, stimulate protein kinase C activity in vitro.
-
- Institutional address:
- Toxicology Program
- North Carolina State University
- Raleigh 27695-7633.
-
-
- *****CRITICAL REVIEWS IN TOXICOLOGY*****
-
-
-
- Dahl AR Hadley WM
- Nasal cavity enzymes involved in xenobiotic metabolism: effects on
- the toxicity of inhalants.
-
- In: Crit Rev Toxicol (1991) 21(5):345-72
-
- A decade ago, the ability of nasal tissues to metabolize inhalants
- was only dimly suspected. Since then, the metabolic capacities of
- nasal cavity tissues has been extensively investigated in mammals,
- including man. Aldehyde dehydrogenases, cytochrome P-450-dependent
- monooxygenases, rhodanese, glutathione transferases, epoxide
- hydrolases, flavin-containing monooxygenases, and carboxyl esterases
- have all been reported to occur in substantial amounts in the nasal
- cavity. The contributions of these enzyme activities to the induction
- of toxic effects from inhalants such as benzo-a-pyrene,
- acetaminophen, formaldehyde, cocaine, dimethylnitrosamine, ferrocene,
- and 3-trifluoromethylpyridine have been the subject of dozens of
- reports. In addition, the influence of these enzyme activities on
- olfaction and their contribution to vapor uptake is beginning to
- receive attention from the research community. Research in the next
- decade promises to provide answers to the many still unanswered
- questions posed by the presence of the substantial xenobiotic
- metabolizing capacity of the nasal cavity.
-
- Institutional address:
- Inhalation Toxicology Research Institute
- Lovelace Biomedical and Environmental Research Institute
- Albuquerque
- NM.
-
-
- *****KOKYU TO JUNKAN. RESPIRATION AND CIRCULATION*****
-
-
-
- Inoue M Homma Y Kawakami Y
- [Inorganic inhalants as one of the etiologic agents in idiopathic
- interstitial pneumonia]
-
- In: Kokyu To Junkan (1985 Dec) 33(12):1423-33 (Published in Japanese)
-
- [No Abstract Available]
-
-
- *****MUTATION RESEARCH*****
-
- Groschel-Stewart U Mayer VW Taylor-Mayer RE Zimmermann FK
- Aprotic polar solvents inducing chromosomal malsegregation in yeast
- interfere with the assembly of porcine brain tubulin in vitro.
-
- In: Mutat Res (1985 May) 149(3):333-8
-
- A number of aprotic solvents which had previously been found to
- induce mitotic aneuploidy in yeast were tested for their effects on
- re-assembly of twice recycled tubulin from pig brain. Some of the
- solvents which were strong aneuploidy-inducing mutagens in yeast
- slowed down tubulin assembly in vitro at concentrations lower than
- those required for aneuploidy induction. Ethyl acetate, methyl
- acetate, diethyl ketone and acetonitrile fell into this category.
- Other strong aneuploidy-inducing agents like acetone and 2-
- methoxyethyl acetate accelerated tubulin assembly. Non-genetically
- active methyl isopropyl ketone and isopropyl acetate both accelerated
- assembly, whereas methyl n-propyl ketone and n-propyl acetate were
- weak inducers of aneuploidy and slowed down the rate and extent of
- assembly. Those chemicals which slowed down the assembly rate also
- reduced the extent of assembly. Most chemicals which accelerated
- assembly also led to an increased extent of assembly, with the
- exception of isopropyl acetate. At the higher concentrations,
- however, a maximum assembly rate was reached which was followed by a
- slow decline. Although a perfect correlation between effects on the
- induction of chromosomal malsegregation and the interference with
- tubulin assembly in vitro was not seen, the experiments with tubulin
- were carried out using this class of chemicals because some of them
- strongly induced mitotic aneuploidy under conditions which suggested
- tubulin to be the prime target. The lack of a perfect coincidence
- might be due to species differences between the porcine brain and the
- yeast spindle tubulin, or the test for aneuploidy induction may have
- been negative because the concentrations required for an effect on
- yeast tubulin may be greater than the general lethal toxicity limit.
- Bearing this reservation in mind, the results suggest that the yeast
- aneuploidy test has a considerable predictive value for mammalian
- mutagenicity.
-
- Institutional address:
- Institute for Zoology
- Technische Hochschule Darmstadt
- Federal Republic of Germany.
-
-
- *****NIDA RESEARCH MONOGRAPH*****
-
-
- Newell GR Spitz MR Wilson MB
- Nitrite inhalants: historical perspective.
-
- In: NIDA Res Monogr (1988) 83:1-14
-
- There are important reasons for considering nitrite inhalation as a
- factor in the development of AIDS-related KS in young male
- homosexuals. These are (1) the pharmacologic properties of amyl,
- butyl, and isobutyl nitrites, which are toxic; (2) the mutagenic,
- teratogenic, and carcinogenic products resulting from metabolism of N-
- nitroso compounds; (3) the potent carcinogenicity of N-nitroso
- compounds in 39 different animal species; and (4) the deleterious
- effects of volatile nitrites on human lymphocytes both in vitro and
- in vivo. Specifically related to this epidemic, there are additional
- reasons for pursuing the connection between nitrite inhalation and
- development of KS. These include: (1) the timing of the production
- and sales of volatile nitrites for use as recreational drugs and the
- subsequent outbreak of the AIDS epidemic (7 to 10 years); (2) the
- extensive use of nitrites among male homosexuals; (3) the virtual
- universal history of nitrite use by young male homosexuals in whom KS
- has developed during the past 3 years; and (4) the age group in which
- KS is developing is consistent with a cohort initially exposed 7 to
- 10 years ago.
-
- Institutional address:
- Department of Cancer Prevention and Control
- University of Texas
- M.D. Anderson Hospital
- Houston 77030.
-
-
- *****NORDISK MEDICIN*****
-
-
- Hansen L
- [Organic solvents--an increasing problem in the occupational
- environment]
-
- Organiske oplosningsmidler--et voksende arbejdsmiljoproblem.
-
- In: Nord Med (1982 Dec) 97(12):299-301 (Published in Danish)
-
- [No Abstract Available]
-
- Institutional address:
- Frederiksberg hospital
- DK
- Kbenhavn.
-
-
- *****TIDSSKRIFT FOR DEN NORSKE LAEGEFORENING*****
-
-
- Loberg T Lberg T
- [Clinical neuropsychological investigation and personality assessment
- in alcohol abuse]
-
- Klinisk neuropsykologisk undersokelse og personlighetsvurdering ved
- alkoholmisbruk.
-
- In: Tidsskr Nor Laegeforen (1990 Feb 28) 110(6):721-4
- (Published in Norwegian)
-
- In Norway, clinical neuropsychology is approved as an exclusive
- speciality in psychology. Clinical neuropsychological assessment is a
- well-proven method for which thorough validation studies and
- international norms are available. The method has a clear application
- in the assessment of dysfunctions and resources of alcohol-dependent
- inpatients. Cross-national comparisons show that neuropsychological
- findings are fairly consistent for alcohol-abusing individuals. A
- neuropsychological frame of reference is essential for secondary
- prevention among important groups. Some areas of central interest
- include alcohol and drug abuse among the elderly, occupational
- exposure to solvents, impulsiveness and violence, residual Attention
- Deficit Disorders, HIV/AIDS conditions, and other neuropsychiatric
- conditions.
-
- Institutional address:
- Hjellestad-Klinikken.
-
-
- *****TOXICOLOGY AND APPLIED PHARMACOLOGY*****
-
-
- Juchau MR DiGiovanni J Namkung MJ Jones AH
- A COMPARISON OF THE CAPACITY OF FETAL AND ADULT LIVER, LUNG, AND
- BRAIN TO CONVERT POLYCYCLIC AROMATIC HYDROCARBONS TO MUTAGENIC AND
- CYTOTOXIC METABOLITES IN MICE AND RATS
-
- In: Toxicol Appl Pharmacol (1979) 49(1):171-178
-
- Preparations of S-9 fractions from the fetal brains of rats displayed
- a high capacity to convert 7,12-dimethylbenz(a)anthracene to
- metabolites mutagenic to Salmonella typhimurium tester strains TA-98,
- TA-100, and TA-1538. The same tissue was only minimally active or
- inactive in converting benzo(a)pyrene or N-2-fluorenylacetamide to
- mutagenic metabolites. Fetal brain tissues of mice were virtually
- inactive with respect to the bioactivation of each of the three
- procarcinogens but fetal pulmonary tissues of mice produced mutagen-
- generating activities that were five- to nine-fold above background
- with respect to 7,12-dimethylbenz(a)anthracene. Fetal hepatic and
- brain tissues of mice also catalyzed the conversion of each of the
- three promutagens to cytotoxic intermediates, but this phenomenon was
- not observed with fetal hepatic or brain tissues of rats. Analyses
- with high-pressure liquid chromatography demonstrated that brain
- tissues of fetal mice were very active in converting 7,12-
- dimethylbenz(a)anthracene to oxygenated metabolites, whereas the
- fetal brain tissues of rats were only minimally active. The
- chromatographic patterns observed also indicated that different
- metabolites were formed in the presence of S-9 fractions from rats
- vs. mice. The data are consistent with the hypothesis that the
- previously observed species difference in susceptibility to
- transplacental tumorigenesis by polycyclic hydrocarbons is related to
- differences in target organ biotransformation of these compounds. (21
- Refs)
-
- Institutional address:
- Dept. Pharmacology
- Univ. Washington
- Sch. Medicine
- Seattle
- WA
- 98195
-
-
- *****TOXICOLOGY LETTERS*****
-
-
- Ikeda M
- Public health problems of organic solvents.
-
- In: Toxicol Lett (1992 Dec) 64-65 Spec No:191-201
-
- Selected topics of public health importance in toxicology of organic
- solvents are reviewed. Organic solvents are commonly used as mixtures
- rather than individual solvents, except for the case of degreasers.
- Nevertheless, toxicity of mixtures remain mostly to be studied. Among
- the solvents in general, toluene is apparently the most popular.
- Narcotic effects are common with all solvents (independent of
- chemical structure) at high concentrations, and result in an
- increased incidence of various CNS-related subjective symptoms at
- concentrations in excess of current occupational exposure limits.
- Chronic toxicity, teratogenicity and carcinogenicity seems to be
- related to a given chemical structure. Among the recently reported
- effects are blindness of "sniffers" by methanol inhalation and
- teratogenicity of ethylene glycol derivatives in experimental
- animals. In environmental health, pollution of ground water as well
- as the general atmosphere by chlorinated hydrocarbons has provoked
- serious public concern. In addition, emission of certain chemicals
- including chlorofluorocarbons is recognized to deplete ozone in
- stratosphere, which may result in human health effects.
-
- Institutional address:
- Department of Public Health
- Kyoto University Faculty of Medicine
- Japan.
-
-
-
- Haverkos HW Dougherty JA
- HEALTH HAZARDS OF NITRITE INHALANTS
-
- In: Available from National Technical Information Service, Springfield,
- VA as NTIS/PB89-125496, 126 p., 1989.
-
- Contents: Nitrite inhalants: historical perspective; Fate and
- toxicity of butyl nitrites; Acute toxicity of nitrite inhalants;
- Indications from animal and chemical experiments of a carcinogenic
- role for isobutyl nitrite; Toxicity of inhaled isobutyl nitrite in
- BALB/c mice: systemic and immunotoxic studies; Altered T-cell
- helper/suppressor ratio in mice chronically exposed to amyl nitrite;
- Effects of nitrites on the immune system of humans; Deliberate
- inhalation of isobutyl nitrite during adolescence: a descriptive
- study; Nitrite inhalants: contemporary patterns of abuse; and
- Epidemiologic studies-Kaposi's sarcoma vs opportunistic infections
- among homosexual men with AIDS.
-
- Institutional address:
- National Inst. on Drug Abuse
- Rockville
- MD
-
-
- Horn KH
- [LIMITS AND POSSIBILITIES OF ANIMAL EXPERIMENTS WITH CARCINOGENIC
- INHALANTS]
-
- In: Akad Wiss (1978)(2):52-62 (Published in German)
-
- Animal inhalation studies with chemical carcinogens or cocarcinogens
- are reviewed and their relevance to cancer induction in humans is
- discussed. Current inhalation techniques are not completely reliable
- due to the short life span of the test animals (eg, rats and Syrian
- golden hamsters) and the long observation periods needed to
- approximate human exposures. With the development of more
- sophisticated inhalation equipment, more positive results may be
- obtained with definite carcinogens. Another difficulty with the
- inhalation method is the evaluation of a positive result; ie, whether
- a substance such as ferric trioxide is carcinogenic, cocarcinogenic,
- or causes cytopathological conditions that promote development.
- Intratracheal intubation and implantation techniques are more
- accurate in the production of respiratory tract tumors, and they are
- useful in screening possible carcinogenic inhalants. The system
- application method is adequate only when testing a known carcinogen
- whose activity (po or sc) is organ-specific in the test species.
- However, this technique is useful in that the exact dose can be
- applied and the synergistic and/or cocarcinogenic properties of the
- test substance can be ascertained. To relate respiratory tract
- carcinogenesis in man to animal experiments will require the
- perfection of application techniques and the identification of more
- suitable animal models. (61 Refs)
-
- Institutional address:
- No affiliation given
-
-
- Lange WR Haertzen CA Hickey JE Snyder FR Dax EM Jaffe JH
- Nitrite inhalants: patterns of abuse in Baltimore and Washington,
- D.C.
-
- In: Am J Drug Alcohol Abuse (1988) 14(1):29-39
-
- Nitrite inhalants, as drugs of abuse, have received a new prominence
- in the literature since their use has been associated with Kaposi's
- Sarcoma and possibly other manifestations of acquired
- immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). Changes in patterns and prevalence
- of use have not been investigated since the onset of the AIDS
- epidemic. We have examined the abuse patterns of nitrite inhalants
- (poppers) in several different groups. The use of poppers among drug
- abusers in the Baltimore-Washington, D.C. metropolitan area has
- remained constant over the past 5 years, with the prevalence of use
- being approximately 11% for recreational drug users and 22% for heavy
- abusers. Self-reported use by a homosexual group had decreased over
- the same time period. Sixty-nine percent of the homosexual sample had
- experience with nitrities, but only 21% had used them in the 6 months
- prior to being surveyed. The mean interval since last use was 25
- months, and since peak use, 4.1 years. Among substance abusers,
- nitrites appear to be a drug whose use starts late, with the mean age
- of first use being 25.6 years compared to 14.6 years for glue, 17.6
- years for marijuana, and 18.5 years for heroin. We found both
- heterosexual and homosexual groups utilize nitrites primarily to "get
- high," but homosexuals more often use them during overt sexual
- activity. Experience with amyl nitrite was much more prevalent than
- that with the butyl derivative in both populations. We conclude that
- the prevalence of nitrite abuse among drug users has not changed as a
- result of the AIDS epidemic, but such use appears to have decreased
- within the homosexual community.
-
- Institutional address:
- Addiction Research Center
- National Institute on Drug Abuse
- Baltimore
- Maryland 21224.
-
- Dahl AR Lewis JL
- Respiratory tract uptake of inhalants and metabolism of xenobiotics.
-
- In: Annu Rev Pharmacol Toxicol (1993) 33:383-407
-
- The combined impact of new research regarding the dosimetry of
- inhalants, discussed in early paragraphs of this review, and the
- rapidly developing knowledge regarding the location and substrate
- specificities of the enzymes responsible for xenobiotic metabolism
- should soon lead to new insights into the causes and prevention of
- cancer and other diseases of the respiratory tract and may provide
- insight into the design of drugs used in the treatment of respiratory
- tract disease. Among the developments to be expected within the next
- decade are the following: 1. The issue of extrapulmonary versus
- intrapulmonary activation of lung prodrugs and protoxicants will be
- resolved by validation of the different dosimetries predicted for
- highly lipophilic inhalants compared to less lipophilic ones. 2. The
- possibly complex roles of P450 isozymes 1A1 and 2D6 and other forms
- in the causation of human lung cancer will undoubtedly be better
- understood in the next few years. 3. Interspecies comparisons of
- respiratory tract enzyme activities--both activating and detoxicating-
- -will lead to improved use of laboratory animals as models for
- expected toxicological and pharmacological effects in humans. 4. The
- potential role of nasal uptake and metabolism in causing brain
- disease will be established or denied experimentally. 5. The complex
- relationships between host factors--such as hormone levels and the
- presence of inflammation--and metabolism-mediated toxicity will
- become clearer. 6. As new research results continue to illuminate the
- complexities of the interactions of xenobiotics with respiratory
- tract tissue, clues as to how best to administer drugs via the
- respiratory tract and understanding of changes in disease patterns--
- such as the recent shift in sites for lung cancer--will follow.
-
- Institutional address:
- Inhalation Toxicology Research Institute
- Albuquerque
- New Mexico 87185.
-
-
- Dahl AR Hadley WM
- Nasal cavity enzymes involved in xenobiotic metabolism: effects on
- the toxicity of inhalants.
-
- In: Crit Rev Toxicol (1991) 21(5):345-72
-
- A decade ago, the ability of nasal tissues to metabolize inhalants
- was only dimly suspected. Since then, the metabolic capacities of
- nasal cavity tissues has been extensively investigated in mammals,
- including man. Aldehyde dehydrogenases, cytochrome P-450-dependent
- monooxygenases, rhodanese, glutathione transferases, epoxide
- hydrolases, flavin-containing monooxygenases, and carboxyl esterases
- have all been reported to occur in substantial amounts in the nasal
- cavity. The contributions of these enzyme activities to the induction
- of toxic effects from inhalants such as benzo-a-pyrene,
- acetaminophen, formaldehyde, cocaine, dimethylnitrosamine, ferrocene,
- and 3-trifluoromethylpyridine have been the subject of dozens of
- reports. In addition, the influence of these enzyme activities on
- olfaction and their contribution to vapor uptake is beginning to
- receive attention from the research community. Research in the next
- decade promises to provide answers to the many still unanswered
- questions posed by the presence of the substantial xenobiotic
- metabolizing capacity of the nasal cavity.
-
- Institutional address:
- Inhalation Toxicology Research Institute
- Lovelace Biomedical and Environmental Research Institute
- Albuquerque
- NM.
-
-
- Inoue M Homma Y Kawakami Y
- [Inorganic inhalants as one of the etiologic agents in idiopathic
- interstitial pneumonia]
-
- In: Kokyu To Junkan (1985 Dec) 33(12):1423-33 (Published in Japanese)
-
- [No Abstract Available]
-
-
- Newell GR Spitz MR Wilson MB
- Nitrite inhalants: historical perspective.
-
- In: NIDA Res Monogr (1988) 83:1-14
-
- There are important reasons for considering nitrite inhalation as a
- factor in the development of AIDS-related KS in young male
- homosexuals. These are (1) the pharmacologic properties of amyl,
- butyl, and isobutyl nitrites, which are toxic; (2) the mutagenic,
- teratogenic, and carcinogenic products resulting from metabolism of N-
- nitroso compounds; (3) the potent carcinogenicity of N-nitroso
- compounds in 39 different animal species; and (4) the deleterious
- effects of volatile nitrites on human lymphocytes both in vitro and
- in vivo. Specifically related to this epidemic, there are additional
- reasons for pursuing the connection between nitrite inhalation and
- development of KS. These include: (1) the timing of the production
- and sales of volatile nitrites for use as recreational drugs and the
- subsequent outbreak of the AIDS epidemic (7 to 10 years); (2) the
- extensive use of nitrites among male homosexuals; (3) the virtual
- universal history of nitrite use by young male homosexuals in whom KS
- has developed during the past 3 years; and (4) the age group in which
- KS is developing is consistent with a cohort initially exposed 7 to
- 10 years ago.
-
- Institutional address:
- Department of Cancer Prevention and Control
- University of Texas
- M.D. Anderson Hospital
- Houston 77030.
-
-
- Haverkos HW Dougherty JA
- HEALTH HAZARDS OF NITRITE INHALANTS
-
- In: Available from National Technical Information Service, Springfield,
- VA as NTIS/PB89-125496, 126 p., 1989.
-
- Contents: Nitrite inhalants: historical perspective; Fate and
- toxicity of butyl nitrites; Acute toxicity of nitrite inhalants;
- Indications from animal and chemical experiments of a carcinogenic
- role for isobutyl nitrite; Toxicity of inhaled isobutyl nitrite in
- BALB/c mice: systemic and immunotoxic studies; Altered T-cell
- helper/suppressor ratio in mice chronically exposed to amyl nitrite;
- Effects of nitrites on the immune system of humans; Deliberate
- inhalation of isobutyl nitrite during adolescence: a descriptive
- study; Nitrite inhalants: contemporary patterns of abuse; and
- Epidemiologic studies-Kaposi's sarcoma vs opportunistic infections
- among homosexual men with AIDS.
-
- Institutional address:
- National Inst. on Drug Abuse
- Rockville
- MD
-
-
- Title: Dangerous inhalants are increasingly popular among adolescents.
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Subjects: Teenagers_Drug use
- Solvent abuse_Research
-
-
- Gasoline, felt-tipped pens, deodorants and nail-polish remover are gaining
- popularity among young people -- as drugs. Inhaling, sniffing or, as it's
- called on the street, "huffing" chemical substances is an easy, cheap and
- legal way to get a quick high. But many treatment professionals don't seem to
- know it. "This is one of those phenomena where people on the street are often
- more knowledgeable than so-called experts in public health and drug
- treatment," says Dwight B. Health, Ph.D., a professor of anthropology at Brown
- University.
-
- Fully 29 percent of street youth said they sniffed, according to a recent
- study by the Addiction Research Foundation. Thirty-nine percent cited
- inhalants as "major problems," second only to crack. Inhalants give users an
- initial euphoria that may include light-headedness, exhilaration and sometimes
- hallucinations. Some users experience a sense of empowerment, which can result
- in dangerous behavior. The first inhalation often wears off in just a few
- minutes, but most users breathe deeply and repeatedly for longer periods and
- often concentrate the material in a plastic bag or other container.
-
- Sniffing inhalants
-
- While under the influence, the user may experience drooling, sneezing, nausea,
- coughing, hypersensitivity and progressive lack of coordination. The chemicals
- in inhalants can block the nasal passages and coat the lungs. Long-term
- effects include weight loss; frequent nosebleeds; sores in the nose, mouth and
- throat; and damage to the liver, kidney and bone marrow. Depression is common
- among users, but whether it is a symptom of the inhalant or a condition that
- precedes drug use is not certain, Heath says.
-
- Irritability, paranoia and hostility are other emotional hazards of sniffing
-
- Citation: The Addiction Letter, August 1993 v9 n8 p1(2)
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Title: Dangerous inhalants are increasingly popular among adolescents.
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Subjects: Teenagers_Drug use
- Solvent abuse_Research
-
- Gasoline, felt-tipped pens, deodorants and nail-polish remover are gaining
- popularity among young people -- as drugs. Inhaling, sniffing or, as it's
- called on the street, "huffing" chemical substances is an easy, cheap and
- legal way to get a quick high. But many treatment professionals don't seem to
- know it. "This is one of those phenomena where people on the street are often
- more knowledgeable than so-called experts in public health and drug
- treatment," says Dwight B. Health, Ph.D., a professor of anthropology at Brown
- University.
-
- Fully 29 percent of street youth said they sniffed, according to a recent
- study by the Addiction Research Foundation. Thirty-nine percent cited
- inhalants as "major problems," second only to crack. Inhalants give users an
- initial euphoria that may include light-headedness, exhilaration and sometimes
- hallucinations. Some users experience a sense of empowerment, which can result
- in dangerous behavior. The first inhalation often wears off in just a few
- minutes, but most users breathe deeply and repeatedly for longer periods and
- often concentrate the material in a plastic bag or other container.
-
- Sniffing inhalants
-
- While under the influence, the user may experience drooling, sneezing, nausea,
- coughing, hypersensitivity and progressive lack of coordination. The chemicals
- in inhalants can block the nasal passages and coat the lungs. Long-term
- effects include weight loss; frequent nosebleeds; sores in the nose, mouth and
- throat; and damage to the liver, kidney and bone marrow. Depression is common
- among users, but whether it is a symptom of the inhalant or a condition that
- precedes drug use is not certain, Heath says.
-
- Irritability, paranoia and hostility are other emotional hazards of sniffing
- solvents. Mental confusion and fatigue can forebode tremors and brain damage
- in heavy users. And repeated breathing can result in seizures, unconsciousness
- and death from heart failure, suffocation or accidents. Deep sniffing can kill
- even first-time users, says Heath, adding that sniffing is a favored way of
- committing suicide among young people in some communities.
-
- As with a lot of other drugs, regular use raises tolerance, and greater
- amounts are needed to achieve the same effects. Young people rarely become
- physically addicted to inhalants, with full-blown withdrawal symptoms if they
- stop inhaling; but psychological dependence, or craving, is common, says
- Heath.
-
- "The dangers are real and serious," he says. What worries him most is the lack
- of attention the danger of inhaling solvents gets. "Although this is a drug
- threat that is imminent, it has hardly been publicized, even during this time
- of governmental overreaction to alcohol and other regulated substances," he
- says. "Part of the reason is that the threat comes from unregulated
- substances, highlighting the fallacy of our long-misguided emphasis on
- attempting to curtail supply rather than addressing demand. The irony is that,
- unlike so-called controlled, or hard, drugs, many [inhalants] are toxic in
- dosages that are commonplace, with fatal outcomes not uncommon."
-
- While the use of inhalants is a one-time experiment for many young people,
- others fall into habitual use. These regular users tend to be poor, do badly
- in school, and come from unstable families. Until recently, it was a problem
- known only to a few public health officials for its prevalence among Inuit,
- Native American, Australian Aborigine and homeless Central and South American
- children.
-
- "In much the same way that AIDS was long ignored because it appeared to be
- blacks and homosexuals who were most involved, sniffing may long have been
- ignored as a curious affliction among populations who themselves have tended
- to be ignored," Heath says. "But now we know that sniffing is not restricted
- to marginal populations."
-
- Researchers are beginning to pay attention to the problem of solvent-inhaling,
- and they are finding that more and younger children are involved than they
- imagined, Heath says. The peak years -- eighth to 10th grades -- were first
- included in a survey of U.S. drug use in 1991, by which time the number of
- high school seniors who had experimented with inhalants had increased to 18
- percent, from 12 percent a decade earlier, according to the University of
- Michigan's Institute for Social Research.
-
- "In anthropological terms, it is interesting to see this as an instance where,
- contrary to the usual finding, a pattern of behavior that characterized
- populations that were marginal in many senses -- geographically remote, poor,
- with cultures that are often depreciated -- diffused upward or inward from the
- periphery to the center, from folk to urban culture, and from various
- frontiers to the metropoles," Heath says. "In terms of public health and
- social welfare, it is important to be alerted to a set of risks that few
- practitioners had thought about before."
-
- Heath says there's no data to support the World Health Organization's
- assertion that solvents are a stepping stone to other kinds of drug use. "As
- is so often the case, they are addressing an issue that has big importance to
- a few people, but they're coming at it from an inappropriately ethnocentric
- pre-judging perspective," he says. "We need not concern ourselves with
- imagined consequences when the real and immediate risks of abusive inhaling by
- vulnerable young people are considered."
-
-
- Citation: The Brown University Child and Adolescent Behavior Letter, August
- 1993 v9 n8 p1(3)
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Title: Dangerous inhalants are increasingly popular among adolescents.
- (includes related article on symptoms)
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Subjects: Aerosol sniffing_Physiological aspects
- Teenagers_Drug use
- Solvent abuse_Demographic aspects
-
-
- Gasoline, felt-tipped pens, deodorants and nail-polish remover are gaining
- popularity among young people -- as drugs. Inhaling, sniffing or "huffing" (as
- it's called on the street), chemical substances is an easy, cheap and legal
-
- Press <CR> for more (? for help) !
-
- way to get a quick high. But not all treatment professionals seem to know it.
-
- "This is one of those phenomena where people on the street are often more
- knowledgeable than so-called experts in public health and drug treatment,"
- says Dwight B. Heath, Ph.D., a professor of anthropology at Brown University.
-
- Fully 29 percent of street youth said they sniffed, according to a recent
- study by the Addiction Research Foundation. Thirty-nine percent cited
- inhalants as "major problems," second only to crack.
-
- Quick high
-
- Inhalants give users an initial euphoria that may include light-headedness,
- exhilaration and sometimes hallucinations. Some users experience a sense of
- empowerment, which can result in dangerous behavior.
-
- The first inhalation often wears off in just a few minutes, but most users
- breathe deeply and repeatedly for longer periods and often concentrate the
- material in a plastic bag or other container.
-
- While under the influence, the user may experience drooling, sneezing, nausea,
- coughing, hypersensitivity and progressive lack of coordination. The chemicals
- in inhalants can block the nasal passages and coat the lungs. Long-term
-
- Press <CR> for more (? for help) !
-
- effects include weight loss; frequent nosebleeds; sores in the nose, mouth and
- throat; and damage to the liver, kidney and bone marrow. Depression is common
- among users, but whether it is a symptom of the inhalant or a condition that
- precedes drug use is not certain, Heath says.
-
- Irritability, paranoia and hostility are other emotional hazards of sniffing
- solvents. Mental confusion and fatigue can foretell tremors and brain damage
- in heavy users. And repeated inhaling of these substances can result in
- seizures, unconsciousness and death from heart failure, suffocation or
- accidents. Deep sniffing can kill even first-time users, says Heath, adding
- that it is a favored way of committing suicide among young people in some
- communities.
-
- As with a lot of other drugs, regular use raises the user's tolerance, and
- greater amounts are needed to achieve the same effect. Young people rarely
- become physically addicted to inhalants, with full-blown withdrawal symptoms
- if they stop inhaling; but psychological dependence, or craving, is common,
- according to Heath.
-
- "The dangers are real and serious," he says. What worries him most is the lack
- of attention the danger of inhaling solvents gets. "Although this is a drug
- threat that is imminent, it has hardly been publicized, even during this time
- of governmental overreaction to alcohol and other regulated substances," he
-
- Press <CR> for more (? for help) ! s
-
- Citation: The Brown University Child and Adolescent Behavior Letter, August
- 1993 v9 n8 p1(3)
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Title: Dangerous inhalants are increasingly popular among adolescents.
- (includes related article on symptoms)
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Subjects: Aerosol sniffing_Physiological aspects
- Teenagers_Drug use
- Solvent abuse_Demographic aspects
-
- Gasoline, felt-tipped pens, deodorants and nail-polish remover are gaining
- popularity among young people -- as drugs. Inhaling, sniffing or "huffing" (as
- it's called on the street), chemical substances is an easy, cheap and legal
- way to get a quick high. But not all treatment professionals seem to know it.
-
- "This is one of those phenomena where people on the street are often more
- knowledgeable than so-called experts in public health and drug treatment,"
- says Dwight B. Heath, Ph.D., a professor of anthropology at Brown University.
-
- Fully 29 percent of street youth said they sniffed, according to a recent
- study by the Addiction Research Foundation. Thirty-nine percent cited
- inhalants as "major problems," second only to crack.
-
- Quick high
-
- Inhalants give users an initial euphoria that may include light-headedness,
- exhilaration and sometimes hallucinations. Some users experience a sense of
- empowerment, which can result in dangerous behavior.
-
- The first inhalation often wears off in just a few minutes, but most users
- breathe deeply and repeatedly for longer periods and often concentrate the
- material in a plastic bag or other container.
-
- While under the influence, the user may experience drooling, sneezing, nausea,
- coughing, hypersensitivity and progressive lack of coordination. The chemicals
- in inhalants can block the nasal passages and coat the lungs. Long-term
- effects include weight loss; frequent nosebleeds; sores in the nose, mouth and
- throat; and damage to the liver, kidney and bone marrow. Depression is common
- among users, but whether it is a symptom of the inhalant or a condition that
- precedes drug use is not certain, Heath says.
-
- Irritability, paranoia and hostility are other emotional hazards of sniffing
- solvents. Mental confusion and fatigue can foretell tremors and brain damage
- in heavy users. And repeated inhaling of these substances can result in
- seizures, unconsciousness and death from heart failure, suffocation or
- accidents. Deep sniffing can kill even first-time users, says Heath, adding
- that it is a favored way of committing suicide among young people in some
- communities.
-
- As with a lot of other drugs, regular use raises the user's tolerance, and
- greater amounts are needed to achieve the same effect. Young people rarely
- become physically addicted to inhalants, with full-blown withdrawal symptoms
- if they stop inhaling; but psychological dependence, or craving, is common,
- according to Heath.
-
- "The dangers are real and serious," he says. What worries him most is the lack
- of attention the danger of inhaling solvents gets. "Although this is a drug
- threat that is imminent, it has hardly been publicized, even during this time
- of governmental overreaction to alcohol and other regulated substances," he
- says. "Part of the reason is that the threat comes from unregulated
- substances, highlighting the fallacy of our long-misguided emphasis on
- attempting to curtail supply rather than addressing demand. The irony is that,
- unlike so-called controlled, or hard, drugs, many [inhalants] are toxic in
- dosages that are commonplace, with fatal outcomes not uncommon."
-
- Not just their problem
-
- While the use of inhalants is a one-time experiment for many young people,
- others fall into habitual use. These regular users tend to be poor, do badly
- in school, and come from unstable families. Until recently, it was a problem
- known only to a few anthropologists and public health officials for its
- prevalence among Inuit, Native Americans, Australian Aborigines and homeless
- Central and South American children.
-
- "In much the same way that AIDS was long ignored because it appeared to be
- blacks and homosexuals who were most involved, sniffing may long have been
- ignored as a curious affliction among populations who themselves have tended
- to be ignored," Heath says. "But now we know that sniffing is not restricted
- to marginal populations."
-
- Researchers are beginning to pay attention to the problem, and they are
- finding that more and younger children are involved than they imagined, Heath
- says. The peak years -- eighth to 10th grades -- were first included in a
- survey of U.S. drug use in 1991, by which time the number of high school
- seniors who had experimented with inhalants had increased to 18 percent, from
- 12 percent a decade earlier, according to the University of Michigan's
- Institute for Social Research.
-
- "In anthropological terms, it is interesting to see this as an instance where,
- contrary to the usual finding, a pattern of behavior that characterized
- populations that were marginal in many senses -- geographically remote, poor,
- with cultures that are often depreciated -- diffused upward or inward from the
- periphery to the center, from folk to urban culture, and from various
- frontiers to the metropoles," Heath says. "In terms of public health and
- social welfare, it is important to be alerted to a set of risks that few
- practitioners had thought about before."
-
- Heath says there are no data to support the World Health Organization's
- assertion that solvents are a stepping stone to other kinds of drug use. "As
- is so often the case, they are addressing an issue that has big importance to
- a few people, but they're coming at it from an inappropriately ethnocentric
- pre-judging perspective," he says. "We need not concern ourselves with
- imagined consequences when the real and immediate risks of abusive inhaling by
- vulnerable young people are considered."
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-