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MANAGEMENT OF ACUTE POISONING. Kent R. Olson, MD Medical Director California Poison Control System San Francisco Division. Lessons from history. A young princess ate part of an apple given to her by a wicked witch She was found comatose and unresponsive, as if in a deep sleep
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MANAGEMENT OF ACUTE POISONING Kent R. Olson, MD Medical Director California Poison Control System San Francisco Division
Lessons from history • A young princess ate part of an apple given to her by a wicked witch • She was found comatose and unresponsive, as if in a deep sleep • Airway positioning and mouth to mouth ventilation were performed, and she recovered fully
Lesson: Best antidote is good supportive care (Love’s first kiss)
Young woman found unconscious, several empty pill bottles nearby Unresponsive to painful stimuli Shallow breathing Case 1:
Airway Breathing Circulation Dextrose, drugs, decontamination Initial management: ABCDs
Risks: Floppy tongue can obstruct airway Loss of protective reflexes may permit pulmonary aspiration of gastric contents Major cause of morbidity in poisoned patients Airway issues
“Gag” reflex Indirect measure May be misleading Can stimulate vomiting Alternatives Assessing the airway
Assess visually pCO2 reflects ventilation - ABG useful pulse oximetry provides convenient, noninvasive evaluation of O2 saturation Breathing
pO2 measures dissolved oxygen can be normal despite abnormal hemoglobin states, eg COHgb, MetHgb Pulse oximetry also fails to detect CO poisoning Pitfalls
Endotracheal intubation Protects airway Allows for mechanical ventilation Reverse coma? Naloxone: note T½ = 60 min Flumazenil? Interventions
“A stroke is never a stroke until it’s had 50 of D50” – Dr. Larry Tierney, 1976 Give Thiamine 100 mg IM or in IV Don’t forget GLUCOSE
The patient has no gag reflex, and does not resist intubation. She remains unconscious and on a ventilator overnight Awakens and extubated the next day Dx: mixed sedative drug overdose Case, continued…
47 year old man calls 911, suicidal BP 70/50, HR 50/min Junctional rhythm Hx: uses an antihypertensive Case 2
Pump working? Enough volume (is it primed)? Adequate resistance (no leaks)? Circulation = plumbing
Hypovolemia? IV fluid challenge Pump? Dopamine Inadequate vascular resistance? Norepinephrine, phenylephrine Management of Hypotension
Diuretics Beta blockers Calcium channel blockers ACE Inhibitors Centrally acting agents Vasodilators Antihypertensives
Bad ODs!! Low Toxic:Therapeutic ratio High mortality Calcium channel blockers
Decreased Automaticity & Conduction Negative Inotropic Effects Dilated Vascular Smooth Muscle SVR HR CO AV Block SHOCK
Calcium: most effective High doses may be needed Glucagon – variable results Insulin plus glucose? (experimental) Calcium antagonists - treatment
An 18 month old takes some of his grandmother’s “sleeping pills” Brought to the ER after a seizure HR 150/min Pupils dilated, skin flushed, mucous membranes dry Case 3:
Amphetamines/cocaine Tricyclic and other antidepressants Isoniazid (INH) Diphenhydramine Alcohol withdrawal Many others . . . Common causes of seizures
Anticholinergic syndrome Seizures Cardiotoxicity Tricyclic antidepressants
Stop the seizures Benzodiazepines, phenobarbital Treat cardiotoxicity Sodium bicarbonate 1 mEq/kg IV IV fluids Dopamine and/or NE TCA overdose treatment(similar tox possible w/ massive diphenhydramine)
Case 4: now we’re cookin’ • 24 year old man with Hx depression • Agitated, confused • BP 110/70 HR 120 RR 20 T 40.4 C • Muscle tone increased, LE clonus • Tox screen negative for cocaine, amphetamines
Drug-induced Hyperthermia • Heat Stroke • Malignant Hyperthermia • Neuroleptic Malignant Syndrome • Serotonin Syndrome
Drug-induced “heat stoke” • Altered judgment leads to excessive sun/heat exposure • Anticholinergic drugs prevent sweating • Excessive muscle hyperactivity from seizures, or from extreme agitation
Malignant hyperthermia • Rare, familial myopathy • Triggered by general anesthesia • Succinylcholine • Inhalational agents (eg, Halothane) • Muscle rigidity, hypermetabolic state • Treatment: dantrolene
Neuroleptic Malignant Syndrome • Patient on dopamine-blocking drugs • Haloperidol classic cause • Also with newer agents (eg, clozapine) • Rigidity (lead-pipe) • Autonomic instability • Hyperthermia
Serotonin Syndrome • Current “hot” diagnosis • Serotonin-enhancing Rx • SSRIs in OD or multiple combos • MAOI + serotonin-ergic drug • Hypertonicity/clonus (esp. lower extr.) • Autonomic instability • Hyperthermia
Hyperthermia treatment • Act quickly! • Remove clothing spray and fan • Sedation and anticonvulsants PRN • Neuromuscular paralysis if T >40 C • Dantrolene if NM paralysis ineffective • Consider bromocriptine, cyproheptadine
Goal: reduce systemic absorption Induce vomiting? Pump the stomach? Activated charcoal Gut decontamination after OD
Easy to perform, butnot very effective Contraindicated: Comatose/convulsing Ingested corrosive or hydrocarbon Bottom line: nobody uses it anymore Ipecac-induced emesis
Cooperation not required MD sense of “control” Punitive value? Pumping the stomach
May stimulate gagging, vomiting Risky if airway reflexes dulled Lack of proven efficacy Bottom line: used only rarely Gastric lavage
Finely divided powdered material Huge surface area Binds most drugs/poisons Exceptions: Lithium Iron Activated charcoal
More effective than SI, GL First choice for most ODs Activated charcoal
Mechanical flush Balanced salt solution with PEG No net fluid gain/loss Good for: Iron Lithium Sustained-release pills, foreign bodies Whole bowel irrigation
The best antidote is supportive care Examples of antidotes: Digoxin-specific antibodies Atropine & 2-PAM N-acetylcysteine Vitamin B-6 (pyridoxine) Antidotes:
Call the Poison Center • 1-800-222-1222 - 24 hours • Immediate consultation byclinical pharmacists • Back-up by MD toxicologists • Identify pills, discuss diagnosis & Rx
“I don’t think we should go up there, especially without a paddle”