1 / 33

2005 update on management of poisoning

2005 update on management of poisoning. Kent R. Olson, MD Medical Director, SF Division California Poison Control System UC San Francisco. Case. A 16 year old boy with nausea and vomiting Broke up with his girlfriend last night “Might have taken some aspirin”

nibal
Download Presentation

2005 update on management of poisoning

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 2005 update onmanagementof poisoning Kent R. Olson, MD Medical Director, SF Division California Poison Control System UC San Francisco

  2. Case • A 16 year old boy with nausea and vomiting • Broke up with his girlfriend last night • “Might have taken some aspirin” • HR 100/min BP 120/70 T 98.6 F RR 12 • Exam unremarkable • Na 140 K 3.8 Cl 108 HCO3 22 • Salicylate = not detectable • UTox = negative

  3. Acetaminophen ingestion • Often overlooked • Hx incorrect or not available • Hidden ingredient in many drugs • Nonspecific symptoms (N/V) • Initial labs usually normal

  4. AcetaminophenMetabolism P450 Sulfation (non toxic) Glucuronidation (non toxic) ~ 5% NAPQI N-acetylcysteine (NAC) Glutathione + NAPQI = nontoxic product Liver cell damage

  5. NAC treatment • Best if started within 8 hours of ingestion • However, late treatment still beneficial • Vomiting often complicates PO dosing • Use antiemetics? • Give via NG tube? • Give the NAC intravenously?

  6. So what’s new? • IV acetylcysteine • Duration of treatment • Other tidbits: • Acidosis early after ingestion • Early (transient) elevated INR

  7. IV acetylcysteine • Conventional product (Mucomyst) not FDA approved for parenteral use • But, can be given IV via micropore filter • New, approved IV product = Acetadote™ • Advantages? • Side effects?

  8. IV acetylcysteine • Both products can cause an anaphylactoid reaction (flushing, hypotension) • May be infusion rate related (despite recent report in Ann Emerg Med 2005 Apr;45(4):402-8) • We recommend giving initial loading dose more slowly (45-60 min versus 15 min)

  9. Oral or IV? • < 7 hours after OD • Use oral dosing regimen if not vomiting • Switch promptly to IV if begins vomiting • > 7 hours after OD • Start IV dosing immediately • Either product is okay • Can give first dose IV then switch to PO

  10. How long to treat? • Conventional US protocol was 72 hours • Shorter regimens have proven effective • We have used 24-36 hours for years • Europeans have always used 20 hrs • Acetadote uses 20-hour IV infusion • Bottom line: • 20 hours IV or PO okay in most cases • Treat longer if evidence of liver toxicity

  11. Other acetaminophen tidbits • Acidosis early after ingestion • Usually with levels > 500-600 mg/L • May also see early coma, hypotension with acute massive overdose • Not secondary to liver failure • Transient early rise in PT/INR • First 24 hrs • Not secondary to liver failure

  12. Case • 55 yo man found unresponsive in his bedroom • Charcoal stove was being used to heat the room • Wife experiencing severe headache, dizziness, nausea

  13. Carbon monoxide poisoning • Suggested by Hx of charcoal stove use, more than one victim with ALOC • Other clues? • “Cherry red” skin color - not reliable • pO2, pulse oximetry usually normal • Sx are often nonspecific, flu-like

  14. Treatment of CO poisoning • Initial: highest available flow oxygen • 15L nonrebreather or • ET intubation and 100% oxygen • What about hyperbaric oxygen? (HBO) • Potentially more rapid CO removal • Can it prevent CNS damage? • Persistent neurological damage • Delayed neuropsychiatric sequelae

  15. HBO vs normobaric oxygen • Scheinkestel 1999 Med J Aust 170:203 • Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled using “sham” HBO • No difference in outcome, in fact HBO group did slightly worse • Weaver 2002 NEJM 347:1057 • Also RCCT, double-blind • Showed slight advantage with HBO

  16. So: HBO or NBO? • Issue remains unsettled, but consideration of HBO is now suggested when . . . • Hx of loss of consciousness • Older or pregnant patient • Presence of metabolic acidosis • COHgb level over 25% • Cerebellar findings?

  17. Case • 65 yo woman undergoing transesophageal echocardiography for evaluation of cardiac thrombus prior to cardioversion • Hx of ASCVD, s/p CABG, HTN, Type II DM, hyperlipidemia, obesity, and atrial fibrillation • Meds: amiodarone, ASA, enoxaparin, glyburide, T4, metoprolol, niacin, rabeprazole, simvastatin, and warfarin

  18. Case continued . . • During procedure O2 saturation was measured at 90% • After the procedure her pulse ox fell further and she appeared cyanotic despite 100% O2 • ABG: pO2 293 J Am Osteopathic Soc 2005; 105:381

  19. Methemoglobinemia • Oxidized form of hemoglobin • Unable to carry oxygen efficiently • Blood appears “chocolate brown” • pO2 is normal (dissolved O2) • Pulse oximetry usually 88-90%, even with severe MetHgb (eg, 50%) • Treatment: methylene blue

  20. Causes of methemoglobinemia • Many poisons and drugs • Any oxidant is a potential cause • Some drugs: dapsone; sulfonamides; nitrites; phenazopyridine (Pyridium); and some local anesthetics • The patient had been treated with a topical anesthetic spray containing benzocaine

  21. Case • A 34 year old man is found unconscious, with resp. depression and pinpoint pupils • He awakens rapidly after injection of IV naloxone 0.2 mg • He signs out AMA 15 min after arrival

  22. Opioid overdose • Usually easy to recognize • Coma • Pinpoint pupils • Respiratory depression • Treatment: naloxone • Start with small doses (0.2-0.4 mg) to reduce risk of sudden withdrawal Sx • Observe for at least 3 hrs after naloxone

  23. Opioids, continued • Methadone • Long half-life (20-30 hrs!) • Can see relapse 1-2 hrs after naloxone • Not included in all Urine Tox screens

  24. New opioid • Buprenorphine (Subutex, Suboxone) • Used in Rx of opioid-dependent patients • Longer duration of action • Partial agonist and antagonist effects • Lower “ceiling” effect makes it less prone to abuse and safer in OD • Can cause acute opioid withdrawal Sx See http://buprenorphine.samhsa.gov

  25. (eg, morphine) lower “ceiling” (eg, buprenorphine)

  26. Case • 23 yo woman with confusion, agitation • BP 110/70 HR 120/min RR 26/min T 100 • Na 140 K 3.9 Cl 106 HCO3 16 • Glucose 98 mg/dL BUN/Cr 15/0.9

  27. Metabolic acidosis “MUDPILES” • Methanol, Metformin • Uremia • DKA • Phenformin, Paracetamol (Tylenol in U.K.) • INH, Iron • Lactic acidosis • Ethylene glycol • Salicylate

  28. Salicylate poisoning • Acute OD or chronic overmedication • Anion gap acidosis • Hyperventilation • Typical ABG shows mixed alkalemia and acidosis; eg, pH 7.47 pCO2 18

  29. Case, continued • The woman’s roommate brings in an empty bottle of Long’s Drugs brand Aspirin • Bottle originally contained #300 • What is the recommended dose of activated charcoal? • 300 tabs x 325 mg each = 97.5 gm • Optimal ratio AC:Drug = 10:1 • Dose of AC = 975 gm (16 bottles!?!?)

  30. Gut decontamination • What’s OUT: • Ipecac – except for rare use on scene if hospital more than 60 min away • ? Gastric Lavage – unless large, recent ingestion • What’s IN: • Activated charcoal – if it can be given early and airway is protected • Whole bowel irrigation (WBI)

  31. Whole bowel irrigation • Balanced electrolyte solution containing non-absorbable polyethylene glycol to maintain normal osmolarity • Can be given at 2 L/hr for hrs-days without change in electrolytes, fluid balance • Indications: • Massive ingestions • SR preparations • Agents not adsorbed by AC (eg, Fe, Li)

  32. Potential indications for WBI Cocaine-filled condoms Iron pills

  33. Poison Control Center • 24/7 access to expert advice • Diagnosis & management • Indications for and use of antidotes, hemodialysis, antivenom • MD-toxicologist back-up 1-800-8POISON (California) 1-800-222-1222 (nationwide)

More Related