We observed that intentional overdose was the most common mode of tramadol poisoning in our study population. Young males were involved more frequently than females, which is in agreement with other studies in Iran and other countries [5, 9, 22]. The results show that ingestion of tramadol was the only route of intoxication. This is probably because tablets are widely available in Iranian private pharmacies [23]. Dispersion of injectable forms of tramadol is limited to non-private pharmacies and hospitals.
Among cases, 45% were long-term abusers of tramadol, indicating the potential for abuse. This finding is in contrast with some other reports in which tramadol has been reported to have low risk for abuse [24]. In Iran, however, tramadol has been reported to be increasingly abused by opioid dependent subjects [8]. It seems that the higher prevalence of tramadol abuse in this country may be because of less availability of other legal opioids such as hydrocodone or oxycodone.
In this study, 20% of cases were opioid dependent or abusers of other illicit agents at the same time, particularly opium. This is probably due to high availability of illicit opioids in Iran [6].
Seizure occurred in almost one third of tramadol overdoses (135 out of 401), which is inconsistent with previous reports [5, 9, 25]; although lower prevalence of seizure has been reported [8, 26]. In this study, the smallest reported dose associated with seizure was 200 mg (was seen in four patients). This is lower than previously published studies, in which the smallest dose of tramadol-associated seizure was reported to be 300 mg [5, 27].
Seizures caused by tramadol are typically of tonic–clonic type [5, 9, 25], despite the fact that tramadol at clinically relevant doses may slightly suppress the severity of seizures [27]. Much of the toxicity in tramadol overdose can be attributed to the monoamine uptake inhibition rather than its opioid effects [8].
In the present study, time of seizure varied from 20 min to 12 h post-ingestion; however, 95% of seizures occurred in the first 6 h after ingestion, which is in agreement with studies conducted by Mehrpour et al. [28], Marquardt et al. [27], Jovanović-Cupić et al. [24], and Talaie et al. [9].
Single seizure was the most frequent one that happened in 84.3% of cases while multiple seizures were seen in 15.7% of cases, which is similar to other studies [24].
Previous history of seizure was reported in 15% of the patients. Although this implies that it is a risk factor for seizure, previous seizure in 16 patients of these 21 patients was because of previous tramadol poisoning. In our study, just 1.5% of cases had family history of seizure. Although it seems a weak risk factor for occurrence of seizure in these patients, prescribing tramadol for patients with previous history of tramadol poisoning should be performed cautiously.
We observed co-ingestion in 13% of cases. Other studies have shown that co-ingestion with tramadol increases the risk of poisoning including seizure in cases of tricyclic antidepressants and SSRIs co-ingestions [11]. There is evidence that mortality due to tramadol poisoning is higher when co-ingested with benzodiazepine [1, 5]. In our study, the most co-ingested medications were benzodiazepines. No deaths, however, observed in this case series.
In our study, back-extrapolated tramadol blood concentrations varied from 269 to 20,049 ng/mL with a mean concentration of 3,843 (3,715) ng/mL. Majority of similar reports evaluated postmortem blood tramadol levels [29, 30].
Seizures were more frequent in higher reported doses suggesting seizure as a dose-dependent characteristic of tramadol overdose. Reported ingested dose and blood tramadol concentration were also correlated, but there was poor correlation between seizure and blood tramadol concentration. As a result, reported dose of tramadol overdose seems to be a good indicator to predict seizure in our population. This is not consistent with a previous report [9]. Also, we found that seizure is not gender related and previously proposed relation to younger ages is questionable. These observations are inconsistent with some previous reports [25, 26]. Blood tramadol concentration was much higher in males maybe because males are more prone to drug dependency, abuse, and tolerance.
Although seizure happened in some cases with low blood tramadol levels, it did not occur in some cases with high blood tramadol concentrations. The reasons remained unclear, but drug dependency and tolerance may play a role in this regard. Applied methodology for translating pharmacokinetic data on toxicokinetic data could be imperfect. Additionally, the actual relationship between the dose and seizure could be weak. Tramadol which is used in Iran is an immediate release racemic product. There is no report in literature about any difference in kinetic between chronic users and nonchronic users. Tramadol is a racemic mixture of enantiomers of tramadol: (+) and (−) tramadol. Each of these enantiomers has different affinity for the mu and delta receptors and also their effects on the serotonin and norepinephrine reuptake. Therefore, depending upon their ratio, they affect seizure threshold differently. As a limitation of this study, the current analysis of GC method cannot distinguish between different isomers. On the other hand, since tramadol is metabolized in the liver and eliminated through the kidney, any renal or liver insufficiency may affect seizure threshold or incidence, but the present cases did not have those kinds of disorders. In addition, since metabolism of tramadol by the liver is prone to genetic polymorphisms, any co-ingested drug with potential to affect CYP enzymes will affect peak blood levels. This is also a concern that needs to be answered by further studies.
Tramadol is metabolized to its active metabolite, o-desmethyltramadol, plus multiple non-active metabolites.
O-Desmethyltramadol has a different affinity for the receptors and biogenic amine reuptake and may affect seizure threshold. Unfortunately, we cannot assay blood concentration level of O-desmethyltramadol in this study. It was another limitation of this study.
Formation of the O-desmethyltramadol metabolite is mediated mainly by cytochrom P450 2D6 (CYP2D6). CYP2D6 is the most highly polymorphic isoenzyme of the cytochrom P450-system.there is significant genetic polymorphism affecting the CYP enzymes in humans. This enzyme is deficit in about 10% of population. This enzyme genetic polymorphism may affect tramadol metabolism and peak blood levels. These pharmacodynamic issues (genetic polymorphism, different enantiomers, co-ingestion, different affinity to the receptors, and metabolism) could be the reason why we could not show a strong relation between tramadol blood level and occurrence of seizure in this study. Applying back-extrapolated dose to the time of exposure in poisoned patients is subjected to many confounders including the variable rate of absorption due to the ingestion of food, prior tolerance in addict cases, or potential interpersonal variability in regard to the kinetic study of tramadol. This model, however, was fixed according to kinetic data from a similar population. In addition, as concentration of tramadol was measured once, and time elapsed from exposure were different, this methodology is probably best estimates the true values.
In conclusion, tramadol-induced seizure is dose dependent. Gender and age of patients play no role in prevalence of seizures. Tramadol, similar to other opioids with unique structures such as dextropropoxyphene, which has shown to be much more fatal in overdose [31, 32] should be prescribed more cautiously particularly in opioid abusers and cases prone to intentional overdose and seizure.