Title: Inhalational Poisoning
1Inhalational Poisoning
- Rama B. Rao, MD
- Bellevue Hospital Center/NYU Medical Center
- New York City Poison Control Center
2Classes
- Simple asphyxiants
- Pulmonary irritants
- Particulates
- Mitochondrial toxins
3Simple Asphyxiants
- Alveolar displacement O2
- Non-irritating
- No direct mitochondrial toxicity
4Simple Asphyxiants
- Methane
- Carbon dioxide (CO2)
- Helium
- Nitrogen
- Nitrous oxide
5Lake Nyos Carbon Dioxide
6Nitrogen
7Nitrous Oxide
8Simple Asphyxiants Symptoms
- Loss of consciousness
- Minimal warning
- Non-irritating
- Sustained exposure
- Hypoxia
- Cardiovascular collapse
9Simple Asphyxiants Treatment
- Safe rescue
- 100 oxygen
- Evaluation for other injuries
- Supportive care
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11Pulmonary Irritants
- Can behave in part like simple asphyxiants
- Mucosal irritation
- Acid or base formation
- Some free radical formation
12Methyl Isocyanate
13Pulmonary Irritants Water Solubility
- Highly water soluble
- Ammonia
- Sulfur dioxide
- Hydrogen chloride
- Chloramine
- Rapid onset
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15Pulmonary Irritants Intermediate Solubility
- Chlorine
- Exposure better tolerated initially
- Increased duration exposure
- Subsequent acid formation in upper and lower
airways - Delayed effects
- Acute lung injury
16Pulmonary Irritants Low Solubility
- Include
- Phosgene
- Nitrogen dioxide
- Prolonged exposure
- Delayed
- Pulmonary edema
- Acute lung injury
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18Pulmonary Irritants Treatment
- Removal from exposure
- Oxygen
- Nebulized bronchodilators
- For acid forming agents
- Nebulized sodium bicarbonate
- 1 part NaHCO3 to 3 parts saline or water
- Primarily for symptomatic relief
19Pulmonary Irritants Treatment
- Supportive care
- Admission
- Severely symptomatic patients
- Low and intermediate solubility exposures
- Arrange follow-up
20Particulates and Aspirants
- Gas exchange impaired
- Supportive therapy
- Intubation
- ECMO
- Bronchoaveolar lavage
- Can be fatal in children
21Hydrocarbon Aspiration
- Surfactant disruption
- Higher severity
- Agents
- Low viscosity
- Surface tension
- High volatility
- gt30 mL exposures
22Hydrocarbon Aspiration Symptoms/Signs
- Cough
- Choking
- Dyspnea
- Rales
- Hypoxia
- May progress to ALI
23HC Aspiration Management
- Assess for evidence of aspiration
- Clinical
- Radiographic
- For asymptomatic patients without clinical
evidence of aspiration - Observe 6 hours
- Radiograph at 6 hours
- Admit if signs or symptoms aspiration
24Ware LB, N Engl J Med. 2000342(18)1334-49.
25MITOCHONDRIAL TOXINS
26Mitochondrial Toxins
- Carbon monoxide
- Cyanide
- Hydrogen sulfide
27Carbon Monoxide
- Incomplete combustion
- Fires
- Vehicular exhaust
- Methylene chloride
- Leading cause of poisoning deaths in the U.S
28Toxicity CO
- Displacement O2
- Alveoli
- Hemoglobin binding sites (OCC)
- Impaired O2
- Delivery
- Utilization
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30CO Poisoning Acute Signs and Symptoms
- Headache
- Myalgias
- Dyspnea
- Nausea, Vomiting
- Loss of Consciousness
- Chest pain
- Hypotension
31CO Toxicity Delayed Events
Signs and Symptoms Signs and Symptoms
Dementia Amnesia Confabulation Memory impairment Ataxia Chorea Cortical blindness Incontinence Paralysis Hypokinesia Parkinsonism Tremor
- Delayed neurological/
- neuropsychiatric sequelae
- 2-40 days post-exposure
- Risks
- Age
- Loss of consciousness
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33Physiology CO Binding
- Myocardium
- CV impairment ? Hypotension
- Hemoglobin
- Decreased OCC ? Functional Anemia
- Platelets and PMN
- Nitric oxide ? Hypotension
- Free radicals ? Lipid Peroxidation
- Mitochondria
- Cytochrome oxidase ? Lipid Peroxidation
- Impaired e transport ? Functional Hypoxia
34Carbon Monoxide Management
- 100 oxygen
- Reduce half-life CO-Hb 6hr to 90 minutes
- Assess for pregnancy
- Note that pulse oximetry is inadequate
- Oxygen saturation may appear artificially high
- Assess for end organ damage
- VS, ECG, symptomatology, neurological examination
35Carbon Monoxide Levels
- Venous sampling
- gt 10 abnormal
- Levels correlate poorly with severity of
exposurre
36COHb levels () Symptoms Symptoms
1-2 Normal Normal
5-10 Smokers Smokers
10-20 Flu-like symptoms Flu-like symptoms
30-40 Fatigue Severe headache Fatigue Severe headache
40-50 Confusion loss of consciousness Confusion loss of consciousness
60-70 Coma Seizures CV collapse Death
gt70 Rapidly fatal Rapidly fatal
37Hyperbaric Oxygen
- Decrease COHb half life
- Displaces CO from tissues
- Improves oxygen carrying capacity
- Limits lipid peroxidation
- Improves dissolved oxygen
38Hyperbaric Oxygen
- Variable outcomes in literature 2?
- Definition of DNS
- Timing and duration of therapy
- Co-exposures
- Inability to define equivalent exposures
- Patient variability
39Hyperbaric Oxygen
Weaver LK, et al Hyperbaric oxygen for acute
carbon monoxide poisoning. N Engl J Med 2002
3471057-67
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41Hyperbaric Oxygen Indications
- Neurological damage
- Cardiovascular events
- Loss of Consciousness
- Persistent symptoms
- COHb gt 25 ( some centers use gt40)
- COHb gt 15 in pregnant woman
- Ideally within 6 hours of exposure
42Cyanide
- Salts used in
- Electroplating
- Mining extraction
- Photography
- Jewelry
- Nitroprusside
- Amygdalins
Jim Jones, The Peoples Temple
43Cyanide
- Similar mechanism as CO
- Mitochondrial toxin
- Acute exposure
- Rapid onset
- Lactic acidosis
- Vomiting, seizures, coma
44Cyanide
- Salts
- Alkaline liquid
- Gas
- War
- Combustion
Zyklon B, WWII Auschwitz
45Cyanide Antidote Kit
46Cyanide Antidote Kit
Hemoglobin
Nitrites
Methemoglobin
Cyt a-a3 Mitochondria
Cyanide
Cyanomethemoglobin
Sodium Thiosulfate
Sodium Thiocyanate
Rhodanese
47Treatment Cyanide Antidote Kit
- Known or suspected cyanide poisoning
- Metabolic acidosis
- End organ damage
48Nitrites for CN
Caution
Caution if diagnosis is uncertain or if COHb is
also suspected. Can omit nitrites if uncertain
exposure.
49Hydroxocobalamin for CN
50Hydroxocobalamin Kit
- Sodium Thiosulfate 8 gm IV
- Hydroxocobalamin 4 gm IV
- Under investigation
- Anaphylactoid reaction
- May interfere with some lab assays
51Hydrogen Sulfide