Wearable Biosensors to Evaluate Recurrent Opioid Toxicity After Naloxone Administration: A Hilbert Transform Approach

Opioid abuse is a rapidly escalating problem in the United States. Effective opioid reversal is achieved with the antidote naloxone, but often does not last as long as the offending opioid, necessitating in-hospital observation. Continuous physiologic monitoring using wearable biosensors represents a potential option to extend monitoring capability outside the clinical setting across the spectrum of opioid abuse including post- naloxone administration. The present study aims to identify the physiologic change that marks the cessation of naloxone's effect. Eleven participants were recruited in the Emergency Department after naloxone administration for an opioid overdose and continuously monitored using a wearable biosensor measuring heart rate, temperature, electrodermal activity and accelerometry. Hilbert transform was used to evaluate a 90- minute post naloxone time point. Physiologic changes were consistent with the onset of opioid drug effect across parameters, but only changes in heart rate and skin temperature research statistical significance.

[1]  R. Muelleman,et al.  Opioid toxicity recurrence after an initial response to naloxone. , 1998, Journal of toxicology. Clinical toxicology.

[2]  S. Hahn Hilbert Transforms in Signal Processing , 1996 .

[3]  Hua Fang,et al.  iMStrong: Deployment of a Biosensor System to Detect Cocaine Use , 2015, Journal of Medical Systems.

[4]  N. Volkow,et al.  The Role of Science in Addressing the Opioid Crisis. , 2017, The New England journal of medicine.

[5]  Hua Fang,et al.  Wearable Biosensors to Detect Physiologic Change During Opioid Use , 2016, Journal of Medical Toxicology.

[6]  Edward W Boyer,et al.  Management of opioid analgesic overdose. , 2012, The New England journal of medicine.

[7]  Rosalind W. Picard,et al.  Real-Time Mobile Detection of Drug Use with Wearable Biosensors: A Pilot Study , 2014, Journal of Medical Toxicology.

[8]  Rose A Rudd,et al.  Increases in Drug and Opioid-Involved Overdose Deaths - United States, 2010-2015. , 2016, MMWR. Morbidity and mortality weekly report.

[9]  P I Dargan,et al.  Naloxone in opioid poisoning: walking the tightrope , 2005, Emergency Medicine Journal.