两百年来一氧化二氮的使用和滥用

IF 0.5 4区 医学 Q4 PSYCHIATRY
Estelle Cotte Raffour , Laura Durin , Adrien Monard , Rabiha Giagnorio
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He synthesized it late in the evening at the Pneumatic Institute and inhaled it regularly, sometimes with other substances, including wine. In his book Researches, Chemical and Philosophical, chiefly concerning Nitrous Oxide and its Respiration, he specified that his health had deteriorated with the repetition of these experiments from April 1799 to June 1800, evoking disorders similar to what we observe today with the recreational use of N<sub>2</sub>O cartridges. This gas will subsequently inspire poets and philosophers and become popular in circuses and fairs, where it was used to entertain crowds. In the 19th century, in France, a first wave of concern about the use of Nitrous oxide appeared following cases of death and madness among users. In the 20th century, recreational use remained scattered until the 1990s. It circulated at this time, mainly on the party and techno scene where it was inhaled from whipped cream siphon cartridges, using balloons, alone or in combination, to enhance the effect of other substances such as ecstasy for example. Its ability to block NMDA receptor activity makes it a product that modifies perceptions and the coherence of thought: an effect similar to that caused by ketamine. Its medical potential first came to light in dentistry. Horace Wells, an American dentist, attended a public “laughing gas” demonstration. A man who had just inhaled it fell and injured his calf. He showed no pain. The dentist then had the idea of testing it on himself by inhaling nitrous oxide and having his assistant pull out a tooth, with success. Then he used it on his patients for pain-free care. In France, it was Apolloni Pierre Préterre who developed the use of nitrous oxide for dental care. In 1866, he filed a patent for his invention, which synthesized and administered N<sub>2</sub>O for anesthetic purposes. He developed a mask that allowed for the inhalation through the mouth and nose: the use of anesthesia was quickly adopted. However, during the Franco-Prussian War in the 1870s and the subsequent great demand for anesthesia, nitrous oxide was abandoned in favor of chloroform, which was easier to use. Today, its place is essential and unique among the therapeutic options against pain. Its action is rapid, with few side effects. The patient does not need to fast and can quickly return to their usual activities. It is used during painful treatments or in obstetrics instead of or while waiting for an epidural injection to take effect. Currently, several targets have been identified in the body. Nitrous oxide is an agonist of opioid receptors and gabaergic receptors, and an antagonist of glutamate receptors (NMDA receptors). It is therefore both anxiolytic, analgesic and disrupts memory. It is an essential tool for the prevention of pain induced by medical procedures (dental but also sutures, mobilizations, painful washing of children as well as adults and the elderly). Its use in anesthesia makes it possible to limit the use of opioids. However, its effect on climate change is considerable (300 times greater than CO<sup>2</sup>), and that fact is currently taken into account and it is used less and less in the operating room out of concern for the environment. If Humphry Davy appears to be the first to have used N<sub>2</sub>O to relieve withdrawal symptoms (from alcohol), there is a detailed case in 1972 of a woman suffering from chronic pain and dependent on pentazocine (a powerful synthetic opioid) who was weaned from taking it thanks to N<sub>2</sub>O. From the 1980s on, it was used in alcohol withdrawal by Gillman, but also for cannabis and cocaine addiction. In 2006, the American dentist Alan Blanton described his relationship with nitrous oxide as an addiction. He details in his testimony the phenomenon of tolerance, i.e. the need to increase the dosage to obtain the same effect, and the schemes he put in place to hide his consumption for thirteen years. Contemporary recreational use eventually became part of many students’ lives. In 2015, in Lyon, a 22 years old medical student was treated in a Center for Care and Support and Prevention in Addictology. He presented the eleven criteria of the DSM 5 defining substance use disorder. The beginning of its consumption was festive, then for analgesic purposes in the context of an irritable bowel syndrome. His medical history includes several depressive episodes: a vulnerability, which probably favored his addiction to nitrous oxide. This antidepressant effect of N<sub>2</sub>O has been particularly studied by Peter Nagele, in the USA. In 2018, Bourbon estimates that 49% of medical students had experimented with N<sub>2</sub>O. In a study published in April 2021, 77% of the medical students surveyed said they had already inhaled it. In recent years, new modes of delivery have appeared: canisters of around 600 grams of liquefied gas is the most common model. The complications linked to the inhalation of this pure gas in large quantities are increasing. They are neurological, psychiatric but also vascular with thromboses and cases of substance use disorders appearing. Tolerance to this gas develops quickly, as early as 30<!--> <!-->minutes, and signs of withdrawal may appear as soon as inhalation stops. Among users who present a first episode of neurological complications, some resume consuming with ensuing cravings, thus demonstrating the addictive power of this substance. Finally, in France and in many other countries, a paradox exists regarding the sale of nitrous oxide. 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However, during the Franco-Prussian War in the 1870s and the subsequent great demand for anesthesia, nitrous oxide was abandoned in favor of chloroform, which was easier to use. Today, its place is essential and unique among the therapeutic options against pain. Its action is rapid, with few side effects. The patient does not need to fast and can quickly return to their usual activities. It is used during painful treatments or in obstetrics instead of or while waiting for an epidural injection to take effect. Currently, several targets have been identified in the body. Nitrous oxide is an agonist of opioid receptors and gabaergic receptors, and an antagonist of glutamate receptors (NMDA receptors). It is therefore both anxiolytic, analgesic and disrupts memory. It is an essential tool for the prevention of pain induced by medical procedures (dental but also sutures, mobilizations, painful washing of children as well as adults and the elderly). Its use in anesthesia makes it possible to limit the use of opioids. However, its effect on climate change is considerable (300 times greater than CO<sup>2</sup>), and that fact is currently taken into account and it is used less and less in the operating room out of concern for the environment. If Humphry Davy appears to be the first to have used N<sub>2</sub>O to relieve withdrawal symptoms (from alcohol), there is a detailed case in 1972 of a woman suffering from chronic pain and dependent on pentazocine (a powerful synthetic opioid) who was weaned from taking it thanks to N<sub>2</sub>O. From the 1980s on, it was used in alcohol withdrawal by Gillman, but also for cannabis and cocaine addiction. In 2006, the American dentist Alan Blanton described his relationship with nitrous oxide as an addiction. He details in his testimony the phenomenon of tolerance, i.e. the need to increase the dosage to obtain the same effect, and the schemes he put in place to hide his consumption for thirteen years. Contemporary recreational use eventually became part of many students’ lives. In 2015, in Lyon, a 22 years old medical student was treated in a Center for Care and Support and Prevention in Addictology. He presented the eleven criteria of the DSM 5 defining substance use disorder. The beginning of its consumption was festive, then for analgesic purposes in the context of an irritable bowel syndrome. His medical history includes several depressive episodes: a vulnerability, which probably favored his addiction to nitrous oxide. This antidepressant effect of N<sub>2</sub>O has been particularly studied by Peter Nagele, in the USA. In 2018, Bourbon estimates that 49% of medical students had experimented with N<sub>2</sub>O. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

一氧化二氮(N2O)是在 18 世纪末偶然发现的。在研究硝酸的过程中,英国化学家约瑟夫-普里斯特利(Joseph Priestley)将一种他称之为 "含氮空气 "的气体与水银和铁钉接触了两个月。他由此发现了一种支持燃烧,但对动物致命的新气体。当时,几乎没有仪器,科学家们只能通过品尝和吸入来研究他们的发现。作家们被要求测试普利斯特里的空气,并找到最准确的词语来描述它对人类心灵的非凡影响。年轻的英国化学家汉弗莱-戴维对一氧化二氮充满热情。他深夜在气动研究所合成了一氧化二氮,并经常吸入它,有时与其他物质一起吸入,包括葡萄酒。他在《主要关于一氧化二氮及其呼吸的化学和哲学研究》一书中明确指出,从 1799 年 4 月到 1800 年 6 月,他的健康状况随着这些实验的反复进行而恶化,引起了类似于我们今天看到的娱乐性使用一氧化二氮气筒的病症。这种气体后来激发了诗人和哲学家的灵感,并在马戏团和集市上流行起来,被用来娱乐人群。19 世纪,在法国,由于发生了使用者死亡和精神错乱的案例,人们开始关注一氧化二氮的使用。20 世纪,一氧化二氮的娱乐性使用一直分散到 20 世纪 90 年代。这一时期,一氧化二氮主要在派对和电子乐场景中流通,人们使用气球从奶油虹吸管中吸入一氧化二氮,单独或混合使用,以增强摇头丸等其他药物的效果。它能阻断 NMDA 受体的活动,因此能改变感知和思维的连贯性:这种效果与氯胺酮类似。它的医疗潜力最早出现在牙科领域。美国牙医 Horace Wells 参加了一次公开的 "笑气 "演示。一名刚吸入笑气的男子不慎摔倒,小腿受伤。他没有表现出疼痛。于是,这位牙医想到在自己身上进行试验,他吸入一氧化二氮,让助手拔掉一颗牙齿,并取得了成功。之后,他又在病人身上使用这种方法进行无痛治疗。在法国,是阿波罗尼-皮埃尔-普雷特尔(Apolloni Pierre Préterre)发明了将一氧化二氮用于牙科护理。1866 年,他申请了发明专利,将一氧化二氮合成并用于麻醉。他开发了一种面罩,可以通过口鼻吸入:麻醉的使用很快被采用。然而,在 19 世纪 70 年代的普法战争期间,由于对麻醉的巨大需求,人们放弃了一氧化二氮,转而使用更易于使用的氯仿。如今,一氧化二氮在止痛疗法中占据着不可或缺的独特地位。其作用迅速,副作用小。病人无需禁食,可以很快恢复正常活动。在疼痛治疗或产科治疗中,它可以代替硬膜外注射或在等待硬膜外注射起效时使用。目前,已在人体内确定了几个靶点。一氧化二氮是阿片受体和伽巴能受体的激动剂,也是谷氨酸受体(NMDA 受体)的拮抗剂。因此,它具有抗焦虑、镇痛和破坏记忆的作用。它是预防医疗过程(牙科手术、缝合、移动、儿童、成人和老人的疼痛清洗)引起的疼痛的重要工具。在麻醉中使用它可以限制阿片类药物的使用。然而,它对气候变化的影响是相当大的(比二氧化碳大 300 倍),出于对环境的考虑,目前已将这一事实考虑在内,在手术室中的使用也越来越少。如果说汉弗莱-戴维(Humphry Davy)似乎是第一个使用一氧化二氮来缓解戒酒症状(戒酒)的人,那么 1972 年的一个详细案例则表明,一位患有慢性疼痛并依赖于喷他佐辛(一种强效合成阿片类药物)的妇女在使用一氧化二氮后戒掉了这种药物。从 20 世纪 80 年代开始,吉尔曼将其用于戒酒,也用于治疗大麻和可卡因成瘾。2006 年,美国牙医艾伦-布兰顿(Alan Blanton)将他与一氧化二氮的关系描述为一种成瘾。他在证词中详细描述了耐受现象,即需要增加剂量才能获得同样的效果,以及他为隐藏自己的消费而实施的长达 13 年的计划。当代娱乐性使用最终成为许多学生生活的一部分。2015 年,在里昂,一名 22 岁的医科学生在成瘾学护理、支持和预防中心接受了治疗。他出示了《DSM 5》中定义药物使用障碍的十一项标准。他开始吸食大麻是为了庆祝节日,然后是在肠易激综合征的情况下用于镇痛。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Deux cents ans d’histoire des usages et mésusages du protoxyde d’azote
Nitrous oxide (N2O) was discovered by chance at the end of the 18th century. While working on nitric acid, the English chemist Joseph Priestley forgot a gas he called “nitrous air” for two months in contact with mercury and iron nails. He thus discovered a new gas which supports combustion, but which is fatal for animals. At that time, few instruments existed, and scientists tasted and inhaled their discoveries to study them. Writers were called upon to test Priestley's air and find the most accurate words to describe its extraordinary effects on the human mind. Humphry Davy, a young English chemist, was passionate about nitrous oxide. He synthesized it late in the evening at the Pneumatic Institute and inhaled it regularly, sometimes with other substances, including wine. In his book Researches, Chemical and Philosophical, chiefly concerning Nitrous Oxide and its Respiration, he specified that his health had deteriorated with the repetition of these experiments from April 1799 to June 1800, evoking disorders similar to what we observe today with the recreational use of N2O cartridges. This gas will subsequently inspire poets and philosophers and become popular in circuses and fairs, where it was used to entertain crowds. In the 19th century, in France, a first wave of concern about the use of Nitrous oxide appeared following cases of death and madness among users. In the 20th century, recreational use remained scattered until the 1990s. It circulated at this time, mainly on the party and techno scene where it was inhaled from whipped cream siphon cartridges, using balloons, alone or in combination, to enhance the effect of other substances such as ecstasy for example. Its ability to block NMDA receptor activity makes it a product that modifies perceptions and the coherence of thought: an effect similar to that caused by ketamine. Its medical potential first came to light in dentistry. Horace Wells, an American dentist, attended a public “laughing gas” demonstration. A man who had just inhaled it fell and injured his calf. He showed no pain. The dentist then had the idea of testing it on himself by inhaling nitrous oxide and having his assistant pull out a tooth, with success. Then he used it on his patients for pain-free care. In France, it was Apolloni Pierre Préterre who developed the use of nitrous oxide for dental care. In 1866, he filed a patent for his invention, which synthesized and administered N2O for anesthetic purposes. He developed a mask that allowed for the inhalation through the mouth and nose: the use of anesthesia was quickly adopted. However, during the Franco-Prussian War in the 1870s and the subsequent great demand for anesthesia, nitrous oxide was abandoned in favor of chloroform, which was easier to use. Today, its place is essential and unique among the therapeutic options against pain. Its action is rapid, with few side effects. The patient does not need to fast and can quickly return to their usual activities. It is used during painful treatments or in obstetrics instead of or while waiting for an epidural injection to take effect. Currently, several targets have been identified in the body. Nitrous oxide is an agonist of opioid receptors and gabaergic receptors, and an antagonist of glutamate receptors (NMDA receptors). It is therefore both anxiolytic, analgesic and disrupts memory. It is an essential tool for the prevention of pain induced by medical procedures (dental but also sutures, mobilizations, painful washing of children as well as adults and the elderly). Its use in anesthesia makes it possible to limit the use of opioids. However, its effect on climate change is considerable (300 times greater than CO2), and that fact is currently taken into account and it is used less and less in the operating room out of concern for the environment. If Humphry Davy appears to be the first to have used N2O to relieve withdrawal symptoms (from alcohol), there is a detailed case in 1972 of a woman suffering from chronic pain and dependent on pentazocine (a powerful synthetic opioid) who was weaned from taking it thanks to N2O. From the 1980s on, it was used in alcohol withdrawal by Gillman, but also for cannabis and cocaine addiction. In 2006, the American dentist Alan Blanton described his relationship with nitrous oxide as an addiction. He details in his testimony the phenomenon of tolerance, i.e. the need to increase the dosage to obtain the same effect, and the schemes he put in place to hide his consumption for thirteen years. Contemporary recreational use eventually became part of many students’ lives. In 2015, in Lyon, a 22 years old medical student was treated in a Center for Care and Support and Prevention in Addictology. He presented the eleven criteria of the DSM 5 defining substance use disorder. The beginning of its consumption was festive, then for analgesic purposes in the context of an irritable bowel syndrome. His medical history includes several depressive episodes: a vulnerability, which probably favored his addiction to nitrous oxide. This antidepressant effect of N2O has been particularly studied by Peter Nagele, in the USA. In 2018, Bourbon estimates that 49% of medical students had experimented with N2O. In a study published in April 2021, 77% of the medical students surveyed said they had already inhaled it. In recent years, new modes of delivery have appeared: canisters of around 600 grams of liquefied gas is the most common model. The complications linked to the inhalation of this pure gas in large quantities are increasing. They are neurological, psychiatric but also vascular with thromboses and cases of substance use disorders appearing. Tolerance to this gas develops quickly, as early as 30 minutes, and signs of withdrawal may appear as soon as inhalation stops. Among users who present a first episode of neurological complications, some resume consuming with ensuing cravings, thus demonstrating the addictive power of this substance. Finally, in France and in many other countries, a paradox exists regarding the sale of nitrous oxide. In its pure form used for whipped cream, it is accessible over the counter while the medical form, mixed with oxygen, was included on list 1 of toxic substances and treated similarly to the legislation on narcotics. Legislation on toxic substances therefore had to be adapted. Since 2019, several mayors in France have issued municipal decrees to try to regulate the sale of nitrous oxide to minors and its use on public roads. Then in 2021, under law No. 2021-695 of June 1, its sale is prohibited to minors, and the incitation of a minor to misuse the product to obtain a psychoactive effect is punishable with a fine of €15,000. Finally, since January 2024, sales to individuals are limited to 8.6 g cartridges in packaging not to exceed a total of ten cartridges. On the health front, new recommendations from the ANSM (National Medicines Safety Agency) were disseminated at the beginning of 2023, to improve detection of the use of N2O and to manage serious complications arising from its use, and to insist on an assessment of an addictive disorder.
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来源期刊
Annales medico-psychologiques
Annales medico-psychologiques 医学-精神病学
CiteScore
1.30
自引率
33.30%
发文量
196
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: The Annales Médico-Psychologiques is a peer-reviewed medical journal covering the field of psychiatry. Articles are published in French or in English. The journal was established in 1843 and is published by Elsevier on behalf of the Société Médico-Psychologique. The journal publishes 10 times a year original articles covering biological, genetic, psychological, forensic and cultural issues relevant to the diagnosis and treatment of mental illness, as well as peer reviewed articles that have been presented and discussed during meetings of the Société Médico-Psychologique.To report on the major currents of thought of contemporary psychiatry, and to publish clinical and biological research of international standard, these are the aims of the Annales Médico-Psychologiques.
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