Comparison of acute lethal toxicity of commonly abused psychoactive substances
Top Cited Papers
- 10 May 2004
- Vol. 99 (6) , 686-696
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1360-0443.2004.00744.x
Abstract
Aims To determine the acute lethal toxicity of a range of psychoactive substances in terms of the dose customarily used as a single substance for non‐medical purposes.Design and method A structured English‐language literature search was conducted to identify experimental studies and clinical reports that documented human and non‐human lethal doses of 20 abused substances that are distributed widely in Europe and North America. Four inclusion criteria were specified for the reports, and approximately 3000 relevant records were retrieved from search engines at Biosis, Science Citation Index, Google and the National Library of Medicine's Gateway. In order to account for different drug potencies, a ‘safety ratio’ was computed for each substance by comparing its reported acute lethal dose with the dose most commonly used for non‐medical purposes.Findings The majority of published reports of acute lethal toxicity indicate that the decedent used a co‐intoxicant (most often alcohol). The calculated safety ratios varied between substances by more than a factor of 100. Intravenous heroin appeared to have the greatest direct physiological toxicity; several hallucinogens appeared to have the least direct physiological toxicity.Conclusions Despite residual uncertainties, the substantial difference in safety ratios suggests that abused substances can be rank‐ordered on the basis of their potential acute lethality.Keywords
This publication has 62 references indexed in Scilit:
- Interindividual Variability of the Clinical Pharmacokinetics of MethadoneClinical Pharmacokinetics, 2002
- Survival After Massive Ecstasy OverdoseJournal of Toxicology: Clinical Toxicology, 1998
- An Ethnomycological Review of Psychoactive Agarics in Australia and New ZealandJournal of Psychoactive Drugs, 1991
- Cocaine-Induced Coronary-Artery VasoconstrictionNew England Journal of Medicine, 1989
- Methamphetamine mortality to emotional stimuli administered in the form of affective communicationLife Sciences, 1983
- Death from Inhalant Abuse: Toxicological and Pathological Evaluation of 34 CasesClinical Toxicology, 1980
- Pharmacokinetics of Phenobarbital Following Single and Repeated DosesThe Journal of Clinical Pharmacology, 1979
- Acute Systemic Effects of Cocaine in Man: A Controlled Study by Intranasal and Intravenous RoutesScience, 1977
- Coma, Hyperthermia, and Bleeding Associated with Massive LSD Overdose a Report of Eight CasesClinical Toxicology, 1975
- Remarks on the Effects of Anhelonium Lewinii (the Mescal Button)BMJ, 1896