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A Patient taking overdose of sleeping pills. By Dr WL Yip, AED, QMH. Case report. F / 28, good past health Taken 30tabs of ‘sleeping pills’ suicidal attempt Drowsy, and brought to private hospital by friends within 1 hour. Clinical findings. GCS E4 V1 M5 10/15 Pupil E&R 2mm
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A Patient taking overdose of sleeping pills By Dr WL Yip, AED, QMH
Case report • F / 28, good past health • Taken 30tabs of ‘sleeping pills’ • suicidal attempt • Drowsy, and brought to private hospital by friends within 1 hour
Clinical findings • GCS E4 V1 M5 10/15 • Pupil E&R 2mm • ECG sinus tachycardia 142/min • PR 145, QRS 81, QTc 339
Management • Gastric lavage • Activated charcoal 50gm • Witnessed generalized seizure (last ~30sec) 1 hour after ingestion, resolved spontaneously • Transferred to AED after stablized • (within 2 hours after ingestion)
Progress in AED • BP 130/65, P 130 • Temp 36.5 • H’stix 6.6 • GCS E4 V1 M5 10/15 • ECG sinus tachycardia 123/min • PR 144, QRS 82, QTc 389 • Admit medical
Progress in ward • Stable all along • Blood test unremarkable • Toxicology: BDZs, diphenhydramine • Fully conscious next day • Seen by psychiatrist: adjustment disorder • Discharged home
Unisom SleepGel • Contain diphenhydramine 50mg in each tablet
Diphenhydramine overdose • First-generation antihistamines • H1-blockers • Ethanolamine • Dose-dependent toxicity • Ingestion >1gm at risk developing severe symptoms
Anticholinergic syndromes • Peripheral (dry mucous membrane, hot, dry and flushed skin, peripheral vasodilation, dilated pupil, blurred vision, urinary retention, intestinal ileus, sinus tachycardia) • Central (disorientation, agitation)
Seizures • Not common • Generally short-lived • May be prolonged / repeated if large dose taken
Other CNS effects • Sedation • Catatonic stupor (highly specific) • Acute extrapyramidal movement disorders • Anxiety • Toxic psychosis
Cardiac toxicity • Sinus tachycardia • Quinidine-like conduction abnormalities • Slow sodium channels conduction result in decreased conduction and contractility • Associated prolonged QT
Other rare features • Rhabdomyolysis • Hyperthermia • Ventricular tachycardia
Management • ABC • Activated charcoal • Gastric lavage • Consider even after 1 hour since diphenhydramine decreases your gut motility
Treatment of agitation • Due to anti-cholinergic effects • Benzodiazepines • Physostigmine (if no conduction disturbance)
Cardiovascular toxicity • No treatment for sinus tachycardia • Intravenous sodium bicarbonate for conduction abnormalities
Prognosis • Most recovered with supportive treatment and observation
Learning Points • We should consider the potential risk of aspiration if we perform GL in patient with impaired conscious level and at risk of developing convulsion Airway protection should be ensured • Precautions and potential advantages in using physostigmine for the treatment of anti-cholinergic poisoning (Burns et al, Ann Emerg Med. April 2000;35:374-381)