Title: Introduction to the Poisoned Patient
1Introduction to the Poisoned Patient
- Department of Emergency Medicine
- The Ottawa Hospital
2Outline
- Directed toxicology history
- Toxidromes
- Cases/Treatment
3Toxicology - Objectives
- Determine whether poisoning has occurred, the
substance involved, how severe the exposure was,
how toxic it is likely to become, and the
causticity of substance. - Perform supportive care, decontamination or
prevention of further absorption, give antidote
where indicated, and enhance elimination of the
poison. - - Discuss special considerations in the
management of poisoning with aspirin,
acetaminophen, tricyclic antidepressants, and
methanol.
4Clinical Timeline
History
Toxidrome
Treatment
Laboratory
Confirm or refute
Reassess
5Directed Tox History
- When (most NB)
- What
- How
- How much?
- Method?
- Whose?
- Compliance
- Coingestants?
- Access
- Specifics
- Self treatment?
- Ipecac
- Induced emesis
- Ethanol
- Intent?
- Symptoms
Work hard to get it, then be suspect!
6Toxidrome
- What it is
- a clustering of symptoms and/or signs
- consistent with a class of drugs/medications
- What it isnt
- a way to identify a specific substance
- a way to discriminate well among contradictory
agents until repeated over time
7Common Toxidromes
- Narcotic (coma resp depression, miosis)
- Anticholinergic (mad as a hatter )
- Cholinergic (DUMBELS)
- Sedative/Hypnotic (pupillary rxn spared)
- Stimulant or Sympathomimetic
- Hallucinogens
- Extrapyrimidal
- Serotonergic
8Anticholinergics
- TCAs, atropine, scopolamine, antihistamines
- Mad as a hatter (delerium)
- Hot as a hare (fever)
- Blind as a bat (mydriasis)
- Dry as bone (dry mucous membrane, urinary
retention, decreased BS) - Red as beet (flushing)
- Bowel and bladder lose tone and heart goes on
alone) - Difference with adrenergics
- Bowel sounds present
- Diaphoresis
9Cholinergics
- Pheostigmine, organophosphtes (insecticides), and
nerve gas (DUMBELS) - Diaphoresis, diarrhea, decreased BP
- Urination frequent
- Miosis
- Bronchospasm, bronchorrhea, bradycardia
- Emesis, excitation of skeletal muscle
- Lacrimation
- Salivation / seizures
10Sympathomimetics
- Amphetamine, cocaine
- Resemble paranoid schizophrenic
- CNS stimulation
- Seizures
- Psychosis
- Increased BP, pulse, Temp
11Hallucinogens
- Hallucinations
- May be oriented to time / place / person
- Tachy
- HTN
- mydriasis
12Opioids
- Coma
- Resp depression
- Miosis (not with demerol)
13Sedatives
- Barbituarates, ethanol, benzos, ethanol, GHM
(gamma hydroxybutyric acid) - CNS depression
- Resp depression
- Coma
- Pupil rxn usually spared
14Extrapyramidal
- chlorpromazine, stemetil, halodol,
metocloperamide - Dystonia (occulogyric crisis, laryngospasm,
torticollis) - Akithesia
- Parkinson like sx (tremor, ridgidity, akinesia,
postural instability) - Dyskinesia (tic, spasm, chorea, myoclonus)
15Seratonergic
- Mimics NMS (neuroleptic malignant syndrome) of
increased BP, increased pulse, increased temp,
increased resp rate (onset within 24 hours,
hyperactive, clonus, hyperreflexic, clonus) - NMS (due to massive dopamine blockade) (FARMERS)
- Fever
- Autonomic changes (increased bp, pulse, sweating)
/ acidosis (rare) - Rigidity of muscles / rhabdomyolyis
- Mental status changes (eg. Confusion)
- Elevated BP, HR, pulse, RR
- Rhabdomysolysis
- Seizures
- Onset days to weeks
16Case
A 78 yo F presents with agitation and confusion.
BP 180/105, P 110 RR 16 T 38.2 C. Physical exam
reveals an acutely agitated pt, pupils 6 mm,
CVS/resp normal except tachycardia.
Is a toxidrome present? What are the treatment
priorities? What tests do you want to order?
17Investigations
- Serum levels
- acetaminophen (4 hour level)
- ASA
- Ethanol
- ingestion specific (eg phenytoin, digoxin level)
- Electrolytes, BUN/Cr
- EKG
- Serum osmolarity
18What about a Tox Screen?
- Urine immunoassays
- lab determines which tests to include on the
screen - Often clinically irrelevant
- confuse the clinical picture
- positive cocaine in a patient with an opioid
toxidrome - toxic TCA level in a cyclobenzaprine (Flexeril)
overdose
Treat the patient, not the test!
19Case
A 78 yo F presents with agitation and confusion.
BP 180/105, P 110 RR 16 T 38.2 C. Physical exam
reveals an acutely agitated pt, pupils 6 mm,
CVS/resp normal except tachycardia.
Is a toxidrome present? What are the treatment
priorities? What tests do you want to order?
20Supportive treatment of the poisoned patient is
the cornerstone of management
21A 20 yo F comes to the ED saying she just took a
whole bottle (1.5 grams) of Elavil
(amitriptylline). Her vital signs are normal.
She is alert and exam is normal.
- Treatment considerations?
22Treatment
- Elimination
- Activated Charcoal
- Whole Bowel Irrigation
- Removal
- Gastric Lavage
- Antidotes
23Treatment
- Elimination
- Activated Charcoal
- Whole Bowel Irrigation
- Removal
- Gastric Lavage
- Antidotes
24Activated Charcoal
- Ingestion lt 1 hr
- upto 2 hrs if delayed emptying, bad toxin
- 1 g/kg or 10 g for each gram of OD drug
- Ineffective
- Pesticides
- Hydrocarbons
- Alcohols
- Iron
- Lithium
- Alkalis / acids (contraindicated)
25Activated Charcoal
- CX
- Aspiration
- Gastric content aspiration worse than charcoal
aspiration - But a lot worse if dump charcoal into lungs
- Perforation if bowels not moving
26Cathartics
- Sorbitol
- available premixed with charcoal
- can use for first dose
- contraindicated if lt 2 years
- electrolyte problems
- Used with charcoal to counteract its constipating
effect
27To Give or Not to Give...
An alert 36 year old M 2 hours post accidental
ingestion of antifreeze
28To Give or Not to Give...
An alert 36 year old M 2 hours post accidental
ingestion of antifreeze
A Not indicated 2hrs is too late (esp for
liquid) and alcohols bind poorly
29To Give or Not to Give...
A somnolent 45 yo F with ingestion of olanzapine
(Zyprexa) and venlafaxine (Effexor) at an
undetermined time.
30To Give or Not to Give...
A somnolent 45 yo F with ingestion of olanzapine
(Zyprexa) and venlafaxine (Effexor) at an
undetermined time.
A Not indicated undetermined time (likely
greater than 1 hr for toxicity to develop from
these agents) and risk of aspiration given
altered mental status.
31To Give or Not to Give...
An intubated 37 yo F 30 min after collapsed after
metoprolol OD.
32To Give or Not to Give...
An intubated 37 yo F 30 min after collapsed after
metoprolol OD.
A Indicated recent ingestion, (very) bad drug
and airway is protected.
33Treatment
- Elimination
- Activated Charcoal
- Whole Bowel Irrigation
- Removal
- Gastric Lavage
- Antidotes
34Decontamination
- Gastric Lavage
- recent (lt 1hr)
- Life threatening ingestion
- no antidote
- not adsorbed by AC
- sustained release
- concretions
- no emesis
EasyLav
35Gastric Lavage
- Large hose with blunt end (need this for tablets
to pass) - LL decubitus position with pylorus pointing
upwards - Has to have airway protected either intubated of
fully conscious - Have bucket of warm water and bucket on floor
36Gastric Lavage
- Give warm water through funnel / tube above pt
Percuss stomach move tube below level of head
to drain into bucket repeat - Prevents drug from getting into small intestine
as drain directly from stomach
37Treatment
- Elimination
- Activated Charcoal
- Whole Bowel Irrigation
- Removal
- Gastric Lavage
- Dialysis
- Antidotes
38Whole Bowel Irrigation
- Polyethylene glycol (eg. Golytely)
- 1-2 L/hr via NGT until clear effluent
- Do for 4 to 6 hours until clear effluent via
rectal tube - SR preps, Lithium, iron, sustained release drugs
- Body packers/stuffers
39A 20 yo F comes to the ED saying she just took a
whole bottle (1.5 grams) of Elavil
(amitriptylline). Her vital signs are normal.
She is alert and exam is normal.
- Treatment considerations?
40Tricyclic Antidepressants - Sx
- Block sodium channels
- Neuro
- mental status changes
- anticholinergic toxicity
- seizures
- Cardiac
- (lethal) arrhythmias
- AV blocks
- hypotension
- QRS gt 120 ms and R in aVR gt 3mm predicts
seizures/ arrhythmias
41Tricyclic Antidepressants - Mgmt
- Activated Charcoal (no role for dialysis)
- Alkalinization of blood (7.45 7.50) with sodium
bicarbonate - Abolishes dysrhythmias and improves hypotension
- Use if QRS gt 100 msec
- Administer as 1 2 mEq/kg IV push then 20 mEq /
hr drip
42Enhanced Elimination
- Diuresis
- Alkaline
- 3 amps NaHCO3 in 1 L D5W with 40 mmol KCl at 250
mL/hr - goal urine pH 7.5-8
- E.g Salicylates, Phenobarbital
- Neutral
- Lithium
43Tricyclic Antidepressants - Mgmt
- Seizure mgmt
- avoid dilantin (increases dysrhythmias)
- Diazepam/lorazepam/ phenobarbitol
- Hypotension
- Crystalloid and alkalinization
- Vasopressors if no response
- Dysrhythmias unresponsive to bicarb
- Lidocaine
- Consider pacemaker insertion for blocks
44A 34 yo M presents 4 hours after ingesting 100
regular ASA pills. He complains of tinnitus, is
vomiting and has an ASA level of 6 mmol/L. His
vital signs are BP 132/78 P 85 RR 28 T 37.5 C
- Decontamination?Other treatment considerations?
45Commonly Dialysable Drugs
- Isopropanol
- Salicylates
- Theophylline
- Uremia
- Methanol
- Barbiturates
- Lithium
- Ethylene Glycol
46Salicylates - Symptoms
- Causes metabolic acidosis .. Initially resp
alkalosis as stimulates resp centre - Mild ototoxicity (tinnitis, vertigo)
- Severe CNS stimulation followed by depression
(confusion, delerium, seizures_ - Cardiac dysrhythmias, noncardiogenic pulmonary
edema, renal failure, hemorrhage
47Salicylates Treatment
- Treatment is not dependant on specific serum
level it is a CLINICAL diagnosis - Done nomogram USELESS
- Draw levels to ensure declining
48Salicylates Evaluation
- Decontamination with Activated charcoal
- Consider gastric lavage if lt 60 min
- Alkaline diuresis with bicarb increases
elimination of ASA (goal of urine pH 5 8) - See TCA OD for bicarb dosing
- Hemodialysis is most effective means
- Indications include renal failure, severe cardiac
tox, rising ASA levels despite alkalinization,
pulm edema, severe acidbase imbalance
49Case
A 42 yo M presents after ingesting 30 grams of
acetaminophen. He is asymptomatic. A serum
level 4 hours after ingestion is 1625 ?mol/L.
50Antidotes
Acetaminophen N-acetylcysteine
Atropine Physostigmine
Carbon monoxide oxygen
Cyanide Amyl nitrite sodium nitrite sodium thiosulfate
Ethylene glycol / Methanol Ethanol / fomepizole
Iron Deferoxamine
Lead EDTA (calcium disodium edetate)
51Antidotes
Nitrites Methylene Blue
Organophosphate Atropine
Opiods Naloxone
Isoniazid Pyridoxine
Digoxim Digibind
Benzodiazepines Flumazenil
52Acetaminophen
- Delayed hepatoxicity
- Consider activated charcoal
- Rumack-Matthew nomogram
- predicts toxicity 4 hrs after acute ingestion
- No use less than 4 hours before
- N-acetylcysteine antidote
- Minimum 300 mg/kg IV over 20 hrs
- Goal of therapy is administration of NAC within 8
hrs of ingestion
53(No Transcript)
54Methanol
- Found in windshield washing fluid, paint
thinners, solvents - Converted by alcohol dehydrogenase to
formaldehyde (liver) to formic acid - Formic acid toxic product
- Causes high anion gap and osmole gap
- Affects optic nerve fxn causing papillitis and
retinal edema blind drunk
55High Anion Gap
- C (carbon monoxide, cyanide)
- A (Arsenic)
- T (toluene)
- M (methanol, metformin)
- U (uremia)
- D (DKA)
- P (paraldehyde, phenformin)
- I (INH, iron)
- L (Lactic acidosis)
- E (ethylene glycol (antifreeze), everything
- S (salicylates, strychtnine)
56Anion and osmole gap
- AG Na Cl HCO3
- Osmole Gap 2Na BUN glucose ETOH( 1.25)
- Osmole gap causes
- Ethanol, Isopopanol, Methanol, Ethylene glycol,
Acetone, Glycerol, Mannitol, Uremia,
Ketocacidosis - Isopropanol causes high osmole but not anion gap
- Peraldehyde and isoniazide cause high AG but not
high osmole gap
57Methanol
- 8 hour 30 hour latent period followed by onset
of abdo pain, nausea, vomiting, blurred vision,
metabolic acidosis - Often dilated pupil with photophobia
- High anion gap acidosis
- Na Cl HCO3
- Osmole gap may be high but can be normal
- 2Na BUN glucose EtOH (1.25)
- Normal is 280 295 mosm
58Methanol
- Supportive measures
- Consider bicarbonate with severe acidosis
- ADH inhibitor
- Fomepizole inhibits alcohol dehydrogenase
- Ethanol (BEER!) ethanol infusion as alcohol
dehydrogenase preferentially metabolizes ethanol
(keep at 22 33) - Hemodialysis
- If symptomatic or methanol level gt 8 mmol / L
- Severe acidosis
59TOXICOLOGY AXIOMS
- The most important aspect of the history is the
time of ingestion and coingestants - The most critical therapy varies with the time
course of the patients presentation - No evaluation is complete until repeated over
time - Toxidromes can help identify classes of drugs
- It is often not important to determine the exact
drug taken within a class - Supportive tx is the cornerstone of tx