1 / 67

Specific Toxins

Specific Toxins. Part II. Infectious Agents. Bacterial Food Infection/Poisoning. Signs/Symptoms Nausea, vomiting Abdominal cramps Diarrhea History of eating same foods in same place as others with similar symptoms. Bacterial Food Infection/Poisoning. Management Prevention

sonyam
Download Presentation

Specific Toxins

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. Specific Toxins Part II

  2. Infectious Agents

  3. Bacterial Food Infection/Poisoning • Signs/Symptoms • Nausea, vomiting • Abdominal cramps • Diarrhea • History of eating same foods in same place as others with similar symptoms

  4. Bacterial Food Infection/Poisoning • Management • Prevention • Cook thoroughly • Keep hot foods hot • Keep cold foods cold • Replace lost fluids, electrolytes • Antiemetic agents

  5. Botulism • Pathophysiology • Neurotoxin from Clostridium botulinum • Produced in anaerobic environment at pH >4.6 • Boiling will destroy toxin • Toxin binds to cholinergic nerve terminals; Blocks acetylcholine release

  6. Botulism • Signs/Symptoms • GI upset • Dry mouth • Double vision (diplopia) • Drooping eyelids • Slurred speech • Descending paralysis - respiratory arrest

  7. Botulism • Management • Support ABC’s • Antitoxin

  8. Common Cardiac Medications

  9. Beta Blockers • Signs/Symptoms • Bradycardia • Hypotension, shock • AV blocks • Prolonged QRS complex • Heart failure • Bronchospasms

  10. Beta Blockers • Management • ABC’s • Oxygen • Bronchospasms • Inhaled 2 agents

  11. Beta Blockers • Management • Bradycardia • Atropine 0.5 - 1.0 mg • Glucagon 5mg every 30’ • Cardiac pacing • Hypotension • Glucagon 5mg every 30’ • Dopamine 5mcg/kg/min

  12. Calcium Channel Blockers • Signs/Symptoms • Bradycardia • Hypotension, shock • AV blocks • Heart failure • QRS prolongation does NOT occur

  13. Calcium Channel Blockers • Management • Calcium reverses decrease in contractility • Fluid infusion increases BP

  14. Digitalis • Signs/Symptoms • Central Nervous System • Headache • Irritability • Psychosis • Yellow-green vision • Gastrointestinal • Anorexia • Nausea, vomiting

  15. Digitalis • Signs/Symptoms • Cardiac • Atrial tachycardia with block • Non-paroxysmal junctional tachycardia • PACs, PJCs, PVCs Tachyarrhythmias + Blocks =>Digitalis toxicity

  16. Digitalis • Management • ABC’s, oxygen • Check electrolytes, correct hypo/hyperkalemia • Atropine: bradycardia with hypotension • Dilantin: ectopy • Lidocaine/magnesium sulfate: ventricular ectopy • Digtalis immune Fab Fragments (Digibind)

  17. Digitalis • Precautions • Cardioversion, pacing attempts may cause VF • Vagal stimulation may cause bradycardia, AV blocks • Calcium may worsen ventricular arrhythmias

  18. Theophylline

  19. Theophylline • Actions • Relaxes bronchial smooth muscle • Stimulates respiration • Stimulates cardiovascular constriction • Stimulates gastric acid secretion • Augments cardiac inotrophy • Relax uterine smooth muscle • Diuresis (Stronger than caffeine but shorter duration)

  20. Theophylline • Narrow therapeutic index • Leading cause of drug induced seizures • Seizures can occur with levels slightly over 20 mcg/ml. • Common causes of toxicity • Large single dose • Accidental accumulation secondary to inadvertent overmedication.

  21. Theophylline • Mild Toxicity (20-40 mcg/ml) • Gastrointestinal discomfort, vomiting, diarrhea • Most common sign of toxicity • 60-100% of patients experience vomiting • Restlessness, irritability

  22. Theophylline • Moderate Toxicity (40 - 100mcg/ml) • Hyperthermia • Albuminuria • Dehydration • Hematemesis • Manic behavior • Hallucinations • Wakefulness • Mild Sinus Tachycardia • Tachydysrhythmias • Increased Blood Pressure • Decreased blood pressure

  23. Theophylline • Severe Toxicity (>100mcg/ml) • Dehydration • Metabolic abnormalities • Hyperthermia • Coma • DEATH • Dysrhythmias • VF threshold reduction • Seizures • Mechanism unknown • Indicate poor outcome • May lead to rhabdomyolysis, renal failure, permanent neurologic sequelae • On EEG seizure is continuous

  24. Theophylline • Management • ABCs • Provide O2 • Intubate, if necessary • Support vital signs • Control seizures, arrhythmias

  25. Theophylline • Management • Decontamination • Lavage, activated charcoal • Due to possible rapid onset of seizures, emesis NOT recommended. • Whole bowel irrigation may be necessary if Theophylline levels continue to rise secondary to sustained release preparations. • Endoscopic removal of bezoar may be necessary if levels continue to rise, patient’s condition deteriorates

  26. Theophylline • Management • Sinus tachycardia • Rarely requires treatment • Supraventricular tachycardia • Verapamil • Cardiospecific beta blockers • Ventricular ectopy • Lidocaine

  27. Theophylline • Management • Hypotension • Correct SVT, if present • Fluids • Dopamine • Norepinephrine • Seizures • Valium • Phenytoin • Phenobarbitol • General anesthesia for status seizures

  28. Tricyclic Antidepressants

  29. TCAs • Examples • Elavil • Tofranil • Sinequan • Surmontil • Vivactil

  30. TCAs • Mechanism of Toxicity: Cardiovascular • Alpha-adrenergic blockade: vasodilation • Anticholinergic effects: tachycardia, mild hypertension • Quinidine-like effects: myocardial depression • Inhibition of sodium channels: conduction defects • Metabolic or respiratory acidosis may contribute to cardiotoxicity by inhibition of fast sodium channels

  31. TCAs • Mechanism of Toxicity: CNS • Anticholinergic effects: sedation, coma • Inhibition of NE, serotonin re-uptake: seizures

  32. TCAs • Three major toxic syndromes • Anticholinergic effects • Cardiovascular effects • Seizures

  33. Anticholinergic Effects • Sedation, coma, delirium • Dilated pupils • Dry skin, mucous membranes • Tachycardia • Decreased bowel sounds • Urinary retention • Myoclonic jerking (often mistaken for seizures)

  34. Cardiovascular Effects • Arrhythmias, abnormal conduction, hypotension • Prolongation of PR, QRS, QT intervals (QRS > 0.12 is a good predictor of toxicity) • Various degrees of AV block • Hypotension caused by vasodilatation • Cardiogenic shock • Pulmonary edema

  35. Seizures • Common with TCA toxicity • Recurrent or persistent • Combined with diminished sweating can lead to • Severe hyperthermia, • Rhabdomyolysis • Brain damage • Multisystem failure • DEATH

  36. Death • Usually occurs within hours due to : • Ventricular fibrillation • Intractable cardiogenic shock • Status epilepticus with hyperthermia

  37. TCAs • The three C’s • Coma • Convulsions • Cardiac arrhythmias

  38. TCAs • Overdose Evaluation • Most have narrow therapeutic index • Doses <10x therapeutic daily dose may produce severe poisoning • 10-20 mg/kg can be life threatening • In children one tablet can cause death

  39. TCAs • Management of Toxicity • ABCs • Decontamination (Lavage even up to 4-6 hours post ingestion may be useful due to decreased GI motility) • Activated charcoal

  40. TCAs • Management of Toxicity • Sodium Bicarbonate (1-2 mEq/kg) • Maintain pH of 7.45 to 7.55 • Protects cardiac membrane, corrects acidosis • Hyperventilation to induce respiratory alkalosis can work for short time

  41. TCAs • Management of Toxicity • Pacing for bradyarrhythmias, high-degree AV block • Overdrive pacing for Torsades des pointes • Do NOT use type 1a or 1c antiarrhythmic agents for V-tach; can aggravate cardiotoxicity

  42. TCAs • Management of Toxicity • Hypotension • Fluids • Vasopressors • Seizures • Diazepam, phenobarbital. • If these do not work, paralyze patient

  43. Iron

  44. Iron • Incidence (1995 AAPCC Annual Report) • 28,039 Exposures • 378 moderate, major effects • 3 deaths

  45. Iron • Overdose Evaluation • How much elemental Fe could have been ingested (mg/kg)? • < 20mg/kg: not considered toxic, can be left at home • 20-60mg/kg: mild to moderate toxicity, some treatment required • > 60mg/kg: high toxicity; hospitalization required

  46. Iron Signs and Symptoms Occur in five stages

  47. Stage I • 30 minutes-6 hours post ingestion • GI irritation, due to iron’s corrosive effects • Nausea, vomiting • Epigastric pain • GI bleeding • Drowsiness • Hypotension • Metabolic acidosis • Leukocytosis • Hyperglycemia

  48. Stage II • 6-24 hours post ingestion • Sometimes absent in severely poisoned patients • Patient seem to improve; feels, looks better

  49. Stage III • 6-48 hours post ingestion • Metabolic, systemic derangement • Cardiovascular collapse • Coma • Seizures • Coagulopathy • Pulmonary edema

  50. Stage IV • 2-7 days post ingestion • Hepatotoxicity (jaundice) • Coagulopathy • Metabolic acidosis • Renal insufficiency

More Related