Medical Group Warns that Common Heart Attack Medications Can Be Deadly for Cocaine Users
The American Heart Association has recommended that doctors start asking emergency room visitors complaining of chest pain, whether they had been using cocaine.
"Chest pain, have you been using cocaine, sir?"
The American Heart Association has recommended that doctors ask certain people complaining of chest pain whether they had been using cocaine.
Two common medications used in the emergency treatment of a heart attack can be deadly to a patient having a cocaine induced heart attack. Doctors are recommended to ask about cocaine use when atypical patients come in complaining of heart attack symptoms – particularly patients under the age of 45, and those without heart disease risk factors, such as smoking or obesity.
American Heart Association statement author, Dr. James McCord, explains that there has been a significant increase in cocaine induced emergency room visits over the last several years, and that studies show that cocaine can both cause a heart attack, or make an existing heart attack more severe.
Cocaine causes an increased pulse rate, as well as creates an increased heart demand for oxygen. Conversely, cocaine constricts blood vessels, leading to a diminished supply of oxygen to the heart – and this combination can be deadly.
Two drugs often used in the emergency treatment of a heart attack are Beta-blockers and clot busting drugs.
Beta-blockers normally lower blood pressure without causing a further constriction of the arteries. In cocaine users, Beta-blockers seems to have the opposite effect, actually increasing blood pressure. In animal studies, the combination of Beta-blockers and cocaine has led to seizures and death.
Clot busting drugs, when used by those high on cocaine, can lead to bleeding in the brain.
The American Heart Association released the information in its organizational journal.
More like this

Drinking Alcohol Even Days Before Surgery, Can Be Deadly
Doctors now caution anyone due for scheduled surgery to limit, or eliminate, alcohol consumption prior to a procedure.

Using Opiates in Massachusetts More Dangerous than Overseas Combat?
Mass. state drugs commission calls opiate use in the commonwealth an “epidemic” and to emphasize the point, compares the numbers of state citizens that die in overseas combat with those that die from drug overdoses – saying that drug overdoses cause 42 times more deaths.

Opiate Overdoses Up Dramatically in Canada
The number of people in dying in Ontario Canada after overdosing on prescription medications has doubled since the 1990s.

Smoking Cigarettes Increases Risk of Cocaine Addiction
Trying to quit cocaine? You might want to consider ditching cigarettes at the same time. New research suggests that nicotine amplifies cocaine’s effects and addictiveness…just remember not to use nicotine replacement products, such as nicotine gum or the patch, as these too increase cocaine’s effects.

Oregon Man Indicted on Manslaughter Charges After Friend Dies from Heroin Overdose
An Aloha Oregon man, who delayed getting his unresponsive housemate medical care so that authorities would not visit his drug filled house, has been indicted on manslaughter charges.
