Cocaine packet ingestion. Surgical or medical management?
M. S. Trent and U. Kim
Department of Surgery, City Hospital Center at Elmhurst, NY 11373.
Current controversy focuses on whether patients having ingested packets of
cocaine should be treated medically or surgically. We surgically treated
two such patients in whom conditions did not allow for conservative medical
management, ie, the packets caused small-bowel obstruction in one patient
while toxic manifestations of cocaine occurred in the other patient.
Initial emergent surgical treatment vs success with conservative medical
management appears to be directly related to whether a patient voluntarily
receives treatment or is involuntarily brought to the hospital on suspicion
of smuggling cocaine packet ingestion. Early surgical intervention is
warranted unless the method of packet construction is known to be of high
quality and if the patient is totally asymptomatic. If these criteria are
present, intensive care monitoring, with surgical intervention on any
change in status, is preferred.