Journal of Isfahan Medical School

Journal of Isfahan Medical School

Comparative study of two types of fluid therapy with dextrose saline serum (DS) and one-third two-thirds serum (1.3, 2.3) in patients with acute opioids poisoning in terms of outcome and length of hospitalization

Document Type : Original Article(s)

Authors
1 Assistant Professor, Clinical Toxicology Department, School of Medicine, Isfahan Clinical Toxicology Research Center, Isfahan University of Medical Sciences, Isfahan, Iran
2 Associate Professor, Clinical Toxicology Department, School of Medicine, Isfahan Clinical Toxicology Research Center, Isfahan University of Medical Sciences, Isfahan, Iran
3 General Practitioner, School of Medicine, Isfahan University of Medical Sciences, Isfahan, Iran
4 Professor, Clinical Toxicology Department, School of Medicine, Isfahan Clinical Toxicology Research Center, Isfahan University of Medical Sciences, Isfahan, Iran
10.48305/jims.v43.i845.1816
Abstract
Background: Opioid poisoning is the most common case of hospitalization in the emergency room of poisoned patients. Administering fluid therapy with appropriate serum with the aim of establishing tissue perfusion and electrolyte stability is a crucial step in the therapeutic management of these patients.
Methods: This study is cross-sectional and descriptive-analytical. The target population is all patients aged 15 to 64 years with opioid poisoning admitted to the poisoning ward of Khurshid Hospital, Isfahan in 2020-2021. The prepared checklist including demographic variables, vital signs, paraclinical test results and complications, and clinical outcome completed and the study results analyzed.
Findings: 169 patients poisoned with various opioid, including 73.3% men, were included in the study. The mean age of the patients was 35+_13 years. A significant relationship observed between the treatment outcome, the type of opioid used, DBP, RR on admission and at 24 hours of hospitalization, and CPK on admission, with the type of fluid therapy. No significant relationship was observed between other variables including the first dose of naloxone required, the interval between opioid use and hospital admission, the length of hospital stay, and most tests and vital signs with the type of fluid therapy.
Conclusion: No significant difference was identified between treatment outcome, length of hospital stays, vital signs, and laboratory tests in fluid therapy with the serums studied in this study. The selection of maintenance therapy with available fluids should be based on the individual needs of patients and clinical conditions.

Highlights

Shiva Samsamshariat: Google Scholar, PubMed

Gholamali Dorooshi :Google Scholar, PubMed

Nastaran Eizadi-Mood : Google Scholar, PubMed

Keywords

Subjects


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Volume 43, Issue 845
1st Week, March
March and April 2026
Pages 1816-1822

  • Receive Date 28 May 2024
  • Accept Date 25 October 2025