Title: Poisoning
1Poisoning
- Temple College
- EMS Professions
2Poisons
- Substance which when introduced into body in
relatively small amounts causes in structural
damage or functional disturbances
3Suspect with
- GI signs/symptoms (nausea, vomiting, diarrhea,
pain) - Altered LOC, seizures, unusual behavior
- Pupil changes, salivation, sweating, other
signs/symptoms of disturbed autonomic nervous
system function - Respiratory depression
- Burns, blisters of lips, mucous membranes
- Unusual breath odors
4Treat Patient, Not Poison
- Proper support of ABCs is first step in management
5Try to determine
- What?
- How much?
- How long ago?
- What has already been done?
- Psychiatric history?
- Underlying illness?
6When in doubt. . .
- Assume containers were full
- Entire contents were ingested
7If several patients involved. . .
- Assume each ingested entire container contents
8Always. . .
- Bring sample of material if possible
- Save for analysis, if patient vomits
- Call poison center for advice on management
9Poisoning Management
- Based on route of entry
- Ingested
- Absorbed
- Inhaled
- Injected
10Ingested Poisons
- Prevent absorption of toxin from GI tract into
bloodstream - Activated charcoal
- Syrup of Ipecac
11Activated Charcoal
- Adsorbs toxin, prevents absorption from GI tract
12Activated Charcoal
- Names
- SuperChar
- InstaChar
- Actidose
- Liqui-Char
13Activated Charcoal
- Form
- Premixed in water (slurry)
- Usually bottle containing 12.5 gms
14Activated Charcoal
- Dosage
- 1 gm/kg of patient body weight
- Usual adult dose 25 to 50 gms
- Usual child dose 12.5 to 25 gms
15Activated Charcoal
- Contraindications
- Altered mental status
- Inability to swallow
- Ingestion of acids or alkalis
- Does not bind
- Alcohol
- Petroleum products
- Metals (iron)
16Activated Charcoal
- Side Effects
- Nausea, vomiting
- Black stools
17Activated Charcoal
- Administration
- Shake container thoroughly
- Use covered opaque container
- Have patient drink through straw
- If patient vomits dose may be repeated
18Syrup of Ipecac
- Induces vomiting by irritating stomach and
stimulating vomiting center in brainstem - Seldom used anymore
- May be helpful if ingestion has occurred within
last 30 minutes
19Syrup of Ipecac
- Dose
- Children 15 cc orally
- Adults 30 cc orally
- Repeat once after 20 minutes as needed
- Be sure patient has H20 in stomach
- Should not be given at same time as activated
charcoal
20Syrup of Ipecac
- Contraindications
- Decreased level of consciousness
- Seizing or has seized
- Caustic poison (acids or alkalis)
- Petroleum based products
21Absorbed Poisons
- Dry chemicals
- dust skin, then
- wash
- Liquid chemicals
- wash with large amounts of H20
- avoid neutralizing agents
CAUTION Dont
accidentally expose yourself!
22Inhaled Poisons
- Remove patient from exposure
- Maximize oxygenation, ventilation
CAUTION Dont
accidentally expose yourself!
23Injected Poisons
- Attempt to slow absorption
- Venous constricting bands
- Dependent position
- Splinting of injected body part
- Cold packs () May worsen local injury by
concentrating poison
24Drug Abuse/Overdose
25Substance Abuse
- Self administration of a substance in a manner
not in accord with approved medical or social
practices
26Substance Abuse
- Psychological dependence
- Physical dependence
- Compulsive drug use
- Tolerance
- Addiction
27Psychological Dependence
- Habituation
- Substance needed to support users sense of
well-being
28Physical Dependence
- Substance must be present in body to avoid
physical symptoms (withdrawal)
29Compulsive Drug Use
- Use of drug and rituals/culture associated with
its use become an overwhelming desire
30Tolerance
- Increasing amounts of drug needed to produce same
effects - Tolerance contributes to addiction by keeping
user chasing the last high
31Addiction
- Combination of psychological dependence, physical
dependence, compulsive use, and tolerance - Patient becomes totally consumed with obtaining,
using drug to exclusion of all other things
32Ethyl Alcohol (EtOH)
33Ethyl AlcoholA CNS Depressant Drug
34Ethanol Intoxication Signs
- Breath odor
- Swaying, unsteadiness
- Slurred speech
- Nausea, vomiting
- Flushed face
- Drowsiness
- Violent, erratic behavior
35Ethanol
- Clouds signs, symptoms
- Complicates assessment
- Head trauma, diabetes, drug toxicity, CNS
infection can mimic EtOH intoxication and vice
versa
36Patient is NEVER just drunk until all other
possibilities are excluded
37Alcohol Addicts
- Experience alcohol withdrawal syndrome if they
reduce intake - Restlessness, tremulousness
- Hallucinations
- Seizures
- Delirium tremens--all of above plus tachycardia,
nausea, vomiting, hypertension, elevated body
temperature
38Delirium Tremens
- Life threatening condition!
- Occurs 1 days to 2 weeks after intake is
decreased - 5 to 15 mortality
- Control airway, prevent aspiration, monitor for
hypovolemia
39Narcotics
- Opium
- Opium derivatives
- Synthetic compounds that produce opium-like
effects
40Narcotics
- Opium
- Heroin
- Morphine
- Demerol
- Dilaudid
- Percodan
- Codeine
- Darvon
- Talwin
41Narcotics
- Medical Uses
- analgesics
- anti-diarrheal agents
- cough suppressants
42Narcotics
- Overdose
- Coma
- Respiratory depression
- Constricted (pin-point) pupils
43Narcotics
- Withdrawal
- Agitation
- Anxiety
- Abdominal pain
- Dilated pupils
- Sweating
- Chills
- Joint pains
- Goose flesh
Resembles severe influenza
Not a life-threat
44Barbiturates
- Nembutal
- Seconal
- Pentobarbital
- Amytal
- Tuinal
- Phenobarbital
45Barbiturates
- Induce sleepiness, state similar to EtOH
intoxication - Medical uses
- Anesthetics
- Sedative
- Hypnotics
46Barbiturates
- Overdose
- Coma
- Respiratory depression
- Shock
- Extremely dangerous in combination with EtOH
47Barbiturates
- Withdrawal
- Resembles EtOH withdrawal (DTs)
- Extremely dangerous
48Barbiturate-like Non-barbiturates
- Doriden, Placidyl, Quaalude, Methyprylon
- Effects similar to barbiturates
- Overdose can cause sudden, very prolonged
respiratory arrest - Withdrawal resembles ETOH extremely dangerous
49Tranquilizers
- Valium, Librium, Miltown, Equanil, Tranxene
- Low doses relieve anxiety, produce muscle
relaxation - High doses produce barbiturate-like effects
50Tranquilizers
- Overdose
- Unlikely to cause respiratory arrest alone
- Extremely dangerous with EtOH
- Withdrawal
- Resembles EtOH withdrawal
- Extremely dangerous
51CNS Stimulants Amphetamines
- Dexedrine, Benzedrine, Methyl amphetamine
- Relieve fatigue, promote euphoria, reduce
appetite
52CNS Stimulants Amphetamines
- Overdose
- Restlessness, paranoia
- Tachycardia
- Hypertension CVA, Heart failure
- Hyperthermia Heat stroke
- Withdrawal
- Lethargy
- Depression
53CNS Stimulants Cocaine
- Stronger stimulant effects than amphetamines
- Can cause respiratory/cardiovascular failure,
heat stroke, lethal arrhythmias
54CNS Stimulants Cocaine
- Snorting can destroy nasal septum, cause
massive nosebleed - Withdrawal
- lethargy
- depression
55Hallucinogens
- LSD, psilocybin, peyote, mescaline, DMT, MDMA
- Enhance perception
- Wrong setting may induce bad trips with extreme
anxiety - True toxic overdose rare
56Phencyclidine
- PCP, angel dust
- Produces bizarre, violent behavior
- Reduces pain sensation
- Patients may be capable of feats of extreme
strength - Keep patient in quiet environment, minimize
stimulatin
57Solvents
- Glue, paint, gas, light fluid, toluene
- Inhalation produces state similar to EtOH
intoxication - Patient may asphyxiate if consciousness lost
while sniffing
58Solvents
- Increase risk of arrhythmias
- May cause liver damage, bone marrow depression
- Chronic abuse causes CNS damage - paranoia,
violent behavior