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tom c wrote:
Acute in a clinicians realm is either a new sudden onset such as AMI (Acute Myocardial Infarction) or a sudden flare up of an old condition such as Acute Exacerbation of COPD. Chronic is an ongoing but currently stable problem. Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease. Chronic conditions over the course of time cause deterioration and for many mortality. Example would be Pulmonary Fibrosis. In another post a "doctor" from POA said Bill's "Vicodin Level" was near lethal. There is no such thing as a Vicodin Level. Vicodin (Lortab, Norco etc) is a combination of acetaminophen (Tylenol) and hydrocodone. In the report Bill's acetaminophen level was barely at the low end of therapeutic and the hydrocodone and metabolites were sub therapeutic. Thanks, Tommy. I'm yust an engineer; I don't have any medical background, and the wide variety of opinion on this is making my head spin. Some people say he would have been unaffected by the levels found in the autopsy; others claim they are near-fatal doses. BTW, in the interest of clarity, here's the link to the post from the doctor on POA: http://www.pilotsofamerica.com/forum...6&postcount=16 I figured his reference to "Vicodin level" was an attempt to simplify things for the layman. When I first read the NTSB report, I had to Wiki the drug terms to find out what that stuff is. I guess I still step back to the "acute drug intoxication" comment on the NTSB factual. Stealth and you have explained the medical meaning. But when I do a Google search on the term, the hits seem to imply that this is a fairly dire condition. Let me try to put it simpler. If I get pulled over by the cops and my blood test shows "... 0.055 (ug/ml, ug/g) diazepam, 0.031 (ug/mL, ug/g) dihydrocodeine, doxazosin, 0.152 (ug/ml, ug/g) hydrocodone, and 0.094 (ug/ml, ug/g) nordiazepam," is this a level at which the courts would consider me impaired? Ron Wanttaja |
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