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Patil Armenian

Department of Emergency Medicine, University of California, San Francisco-Fresno, Fresno, CA. Electronic address: parmenian@fresno.ucsf.edu.

2 papers in the library · 96 citations · publishing 2012-2014

Papers

Multiple MDMA (Ecstasy) Overdoses at a Rave Event

Journal of Intensive Care Medicine May 28, 2012 Patil Armenian, Tanya M. Mamantov, Ben Tsutaoka et al. 81 citations

Twelve people who took MDMA at a single rave were hospitalized in the San Francisco Bay area with life-threatening complications including seizures and hyperthermia. Eight needed emergency breathing tubes, and six had dangerously low blood pressure. Most had high potassium levels, acute kidney injury, and muscle breakdown. Two died, four survived with permanent neurological, muscle, or kidney damage, and six recovered without lasting harm. Ten had hyperthermia, with seven reaching extreme temperatures between 40.9°C and 43°C. Cooling took an average of 2.7 hours. Drug analysis of two confiscated capsules showed they contained 82% and 98% pure MDMA, with one capsule holding 270 mg—more than twice a typical dose. The MDMA-induced hyperthermia, worsened by large doses, a warm environment, and physical exertion, was a major cause of death and injury.

The electric Kool-Aid NBOMe test: LC-TOF/MS confirmed 2C-C-NBOMe (25C) intoxication at Burning Man.

The American journal of emergency medicine November 1, 2014 Patil Armenian, Roy R Gerona 15 citations

NBOMe derivatives, which are modified versions of the 2C class of phenethylamines, have recently appeared as designer drugs in the US market. While cases of toxicity from one derivative, 2C-I-NBOMe, have been documented, no reports have yet described the clinical effects of another derivative, 2C-C-NBOMe, leaving its toxicity profile unknown.