Boston Herald

ERs see uptick in sick potheads

Obscure illness involves screaming while vomiting

- By MARIE SZANISZLO and MATT STOUT — mszaniszlo@bostonhera­ld.com

Some Bay State emergency room doctors are seeing a growing number of daily marijuana users with an obscure syndrome characteri­zed by screaming, violent retching and abdominal pain, symptoms that can be alleviated with medication but that usually return unless the patients stop using pot.

“When medical marijuana was decriminal­ized, we started seeing cannabinoi­d hyperemesi­s syndrome,” said Dr. Matthew Mostofi, associate chief of emergency medicine at Tufts Medical Center in Boston, referring to the technical name for a syndrome that results in what ER docs call “scromiting,” simultaneo­us screaming and vomiting.

“We’ve seen it at least weekly the last couple of years. And it does concern me,” Mostofi said. “It’s one of the downsides to the legalizati­on of marijuana.”

Massachuse­tts voted to decriminal­ize medical marijuana in 2012 and recreation­al cannabis last November. But people with cannabinoi­d hyperemesi­s syndrome are not occasional pot users, Mostofi said.

“We’re talking about people who use it two, three, four times a day — every day — over a period of months or years,” he said.

Dr. Mark Neavyn, an assistant professor of emergency medicine at UMass Memorial Medical Center in Worcester, said his department has seen only five to 10 cases in the last year or two. But if recreation­al use of marijuana becomes more common, that could change, Neavyn said.

“If you expose a population to something, there will be more people at risk of developing a substance use disorder,” he said. “And if we saw a lot more cases, it would burden emergency department­s.”

The syndrome tends to result in multiple hospital visits, partly because it often goes undiagnose­d by doctors who don’t know it exists.

“This is a syndrome we’re just now beginning to understand,” said Dr. Aimee Moulin, an ER doc who sees about one person every other shift at UC Davis Medical Center in Sacramento, Calif.

Anti-nausea medication­s such as Zofran typically don’t work, Moulin said, so doctors often use an antipsycho­tic such as Haldol because it reduces nausea while also addressing the underlying causes of the syndrome.

“If you really want this illness to go away, though, what you need to do is stop using marijuana,” Moulin said. “And that can be such a loaded conversati­on because patients sometimes don’t want to talk about their marijuana use . ... People aren’t fully aware of the potential side effects and consequenc­es.”

Both medical and recreation­al marijuana are legal in California. And Moulin expects the number of patients she sees with the syndrome to increase once commercial sales begin there next month.

Jim Borghesani of the pro-legalizati­on Marijuana Policy Project, called cases of the illness “quite rare” and questioned if any increased reports of it could be due to better reporting in the era of legalized pot.

“We thought it’s something to be concerned about, and we think that safe, tested marijuana would help,” Borghesani said. “And further funding for education that will be generated from taxes will be helpful in situations like this.”

Little data exists on the syndrome. One study tried to determine if cases of cyclic vomiting, including through cannabinoi­d hyperemesi­s syndrome, increased after Colorado legalized medical marijuana in 2009. But the study wasn’t conclusive, noting that while cases of cyclic vomiting nearly doubled and patients were more likely to acknowledg­e using marijuana, it wasn’t clear whether that was secondary to increased use, more accurate reporting on weed or both.

 ?? STAFF FILE PHOTO BY NICOLAUS CZARNECKI ??
STAFF FILE PHOTO BY NICOLAUS CZARNECKI
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