Intro toToxicology - Global Emergency Health Medicine
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Transcript Intro toToxicology - Global Emergency Health Medicine
Intro to Emergency Toxicology
Author: Cheryl Hunchak MD, CCFP(EM), MPH, Lecturer,
University of Toronto
Date Created: March 2011
Global Health Emergency Medicine Teaching Modules by GHEM is licensed under
a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.
Lecture Outline
Bedside approach to the patient with
suspected overdose/intoxication
Universal antidotes
Principles of decontamination
Toxidrome recognition and management
Cases
Learning Objectives
Develop a structured bedside approach to
the intoxicated patient in the ED
Apply universal antidotes when appropriate
Feel comfortable choosing appropriate
decontamination strategies
Feel confident recognizing and managing
patients with classic toxidromes
What constitutes a poisoning?
Whenever an exposure to a substance
adversely affects the function of any
system within the body
Major Routes of Poisonings
Inhalation
Ingestion
Injection
Cutaneous exposures
Case 1
An 18 year old woman is brought to the ED by
her parents. She has been unresponsive for 8
hrs and has the following vital signs:
HR 105
RR 10
BP 90/60
Temp 34.5
How should you proceed?
Bedside Approach
to Suspected Intoxication
“ABCDDDDD”
ABC
Oxygen, monitors, IV access
Full set of vitals including O2 sat
Gather history and collateral information
Check glucose*
Disability : GCS, pupils
Detailed physical exam
Drugs: Consider universal antidotes
Decontamination
Draw Labs
Specific antidotes and care
What history would you like to
know?
History
Often difficult to obtain
COLLATERAL very important
Family, friends
Careful body search re bottles, powders, etc
Patient’s occupation, hobbies
Prior psychiatric history
Prescription medications
History
Drug(s) or substance taken/exposed to
Number of tablets, dosage per tablet
Estimated time since ingestion
Type of preparation (sustained release?)
Chance of caustic ingestion?
Co-ingestions (alcohol, etc)
The plot thickens…
The patients’ parents tell you that she has
been very stressed at school. They found
an empty pill bottle in the house but do not
know what was inside. They found her
unconscious in her room 8 hours ago.
There were no other substances/exposures
noted.
Physical Exam….after the ABCs
Completely undress the patient
Carefully search belongings
General observation
Odours, powders, track marks
Agitation, confusion, obtundation
Detailed Physical Exam
Neuro
GCS, extremity tone, tremors, fasiculations
Detailed exam if possible
Eyes
Pupil size and reactivity
Nystagmus, excessive lacrimation
Skin
Cyanosis, flushing, diaphoresis, dryness
Signs of injury/trauma
Physical Exam
CVS
Rate, rhythm, peripheral pulses
Lungs
Bronchorrhea, bronchoconstriction
GI
Bowel sounds
Bladder size
Rigidity/tenderness
Drugs:
Universal Antidotes
Thiamine
Oxygen
Naloxone
Glucose
“TONG”
100 mg IV/IM/PO
Nasal / face mask
0.4 mg IV/IM/ETT
1 ampule IV D50W
Universal Antidotes
Thiamine: administer if appear malnourished
or known alcohol/drug abuse
Glucose: administer if no immediate access to
glucometer or confirmed hypoglycemia
Order in which glucose & thiamine given no
longer felt to be important
Naloxone
Competitive opioid antagonist
0.4 mg IV/IM/ETT titrated to effect
T ½ = 30 mins
Consider for patients with RR < 12
Naloxone
Can safely give 6-10 mg over <10 min
Can precipitate acute withdrawal in chronic
opiate users
Acute opiate withdrawal is not life threatening
BUT can cause aspiration
Observe patients for 2-3 hrs
May require re-dosing or infusion
What universal antidotes would
you consider giving this patient?
Case 1
An 18 year old woman is brought to the ED by
her parents. She has been unresponsive for 8
hrs and has the following vital signs:
HR 105
RR 10
BP 90/60
Temp 34.5
How should you proceed?
What labs would you consider
drawing for this patient?
What next?
Decontamination Principles
Activated charcoal
Orogastric lavage
Whole bowel irrigation
Urine alkalinization
Syrup of Ipecac
Activated Charcoal
Adsorbs substances from the gut
Establishes concentration gradient that
favours movement into the intestinal lumen,
enhancing excretion by defecation
Can intercept entero-hepatic circulation
What makes charcoal
“activated”?
Charcoal prepared from vegetable matter
‘‘Activated’’ by heating at high temperature
in stream of oxidizing gas (steam, CO2, air)
or with activating agent (phosphoric acid,
zinc chloride)
Creates complex internal pore structure
which increases surface area from 2–4
m2/g to >1500 m2/g
Activated Charcoal
Most effective within 1 hr ingestion
1 g/kg OR 10:1 charcoal : dose ingested
Administer whichever is larger
Given in slurry of water, coke, juice PO/NG
Activated Charcoal
Indications:
Ingestion within 1 hr
Airway protected
Contraindications:
Known/suspected GI perforation/obstruction
GCS <8 or declining rapidly
(risk of aspiration)
Known ingestion of substance that charcoal
does NOT adsorb
Multi-dose Activated Charcoal
Repeated use of activated charcoal to
enhance elimination ingested toxins
Ideal for toxins with long t ½, small volume
of distribution, reduced gut motility, bezoar
formation
Theophylline, phenobarbitol, quinine,
carbamazepine
Improves clearance rates comparable to
hemodialysis
Orogastric Lavage
Intubate patient
Place in left lateral decubitus position
Head tilted 20 degrees downward
Insert 40F orogastric tube (24F peds)
Ideal length measured from chin to xiphoid
Instill 200 cc body-temp fluids repeatedly
until fluid clear
Orogastric Lavage
Indications
Life-threatening ingestions
Pills able to fit through orogastric tube holes
Ingestion within 1 hr
Contraindications
Non-life threatening ingestions
Pills known to be too big for holes of tube
Caustic ingestions
No ability to intubate patient
Ingestions where lung toxicity>>GI toxicity
Whole Bowel Irrigation
Instillation of large volumes of polyethylene
glycol in osmotically balanced electrolyte
solutions
Promotes rapid, mechanical elimination of
ingested toxins
Whole Bowel Irrigation
Intubate patient
Infuse polyethylene glycol through NG tube
at:
2L/hr adults
1 L/hr children > 6 years
0.5 L/hr children < 6 years
Infuse until rectal fluid clear
Whole Bowel Irrigation
Indications
Ingestion of sustained release drugs
Ingestion of substances that charcoal cannot
adsorb (HAILL)
Drugs ingested by body packers/stuffers
Contraindications
Known or suspected bowel obstruction
Inability to intubate patient
Ingested toxin known to cause diarrhea
Syrup of Ipecac
Induces short-lived vomiting
Peripherally and centrally acting
90% patients vomit within 20 mins
Typical vomiting < 5X and < 2 hrs
30 mL PO (adults)
15 mL PO (peds 1-12 years)
Syrup of Ipecac
Indications
Very recent ingestion (<1hr)
Toxin known not to cause decreased LOC
Toxin known not to fit through OG tube
Contraindications
Ingestion > 1 hr ago
Toxin known to cause decreased LOC/seizure
Caustics, hydrocarbons, TCAs
Urinary Alkalinization
Infusion of sodium bicarbonate to raise urinary
pH to enhance clearance of toxins excreted by
kidneys
1-2 mEq/kg NaHCO3 IV push
3 ampules of NaHCO3 in 850 cc of D5W at
1.5X maintenance fluid rate
Urinary Alkalinization
Target urinary pH 7.5-8.5
Monitor electrolytes q2-4hrs (re hypokalemia)
For ASA, phenobarbitol, INH, quinolone OD
What decontamination strategy
would you choose for this patient?
a) Orogastric lavage
b) Syrup of Ipecac
c) Urinary decontamination
d) Activated charcoal
e) None of the above
What decontamination strategy
would you choose for this patient?
a) Orogastric lavage
b) Syrup of Ipecac
c) Urinary decontamination
d) Activated charcoal
e) None of the above
Next issue:
What toxin did your
patient take?
Common Toxidromes
Sedative-hypnotic
Anticholinergic
Cholinergic
Sympathomimetic
Opioid
Sedative-Hypnotic Toxidrome
CNS depression
Slurred speech
Ataxia
Coma/stupor
Respiratory depression
Hypotension
Hypothermia
apnea
Common Sedative-Hypnotics
Benzodiazepines
Diazepam, lorazepam, etc
Barbituates
Phenobarbitol
Case closed….
The patient’s sister shows up to the
hospital very worried. The patient had
admitted yesterday that she felt suicidal
and today the sister could not find her
bottle of phenobarbitol tablets that she
takes for her seizure disorder.
Management priorities??
Sedative-hypnotic OD management
Airway management
IV fluids ++ (warm)
Warming as needed
Pressors as needed
Case 2
34 yo male found at home by wife
Combative, agitated, confused
Vitals: HR 108, BP 146/92, T 38.6, RR 20
Pupils round, 5mm bilat
Skin dry, flushed
Distended bladder palpable below umbilicus
Anticholinergic Toxidrome
Blind as a bat
Mad as a hatter
Red as a beet
Dry as a bone
Hot as a hare
Stuffed as a pipe
(mydriasis)
(confused, decr. LOC)
(flushed, vasodilation)
(dry skin/membranes)
(hyperthermia)
(urinary/bowel retention)
Seizures, rhabdomyolysis, dysrhythmias
Tachycardia is early, sensitive sign
Common Anticholinergics
Atropine, scopolamine
Antidepressants (TCAs, SSRIs)
Antihistamines
Antipsychotics
Antiparkinsonians
Antispasmodics
Amanita mushroom species
Anticholinergic Management
IV fluids
Cooling (fluids, mist, fans)
Sedation
Diazepam IV
Prevents trauma, hyperthermia, rhabdomyolysis
Physostigmine
0.5 – 2 mg slow IV over 5 min
**Not for TCA overdoses
Physostigmine
Reversible acetylcholinesterase inhibitor
Crosses blood-brain barrier
Reverses anticholinergic effects
Shorter t ½ than most anticholinergic drugs
Physostigmine
Major side effects:
Profound bradycardias, dysrhythmias
Seizures
Indications
Severe agitation and delirium not responsive to
benzodiazepines
Contraindications
TCA overdose or Na channel blockade
Asthma or known cardiac conduction
abnormalities
TCA Overdose
IV fluids
NaHCO3 IF:
QRS > 100 msecs
R axis deviation terminal 40 msecs QRS
Hypotension refractory to IV fluids
Ventricular dysrhythmias
NaHCO3 1-2 mEq/kg IV push then infusion:
Mix 3 amps of NaHCO3 into 850 cc D5W
Run at 1.5X maintenance
Monitor serum lytes, pH (max 7.55)
Expect hypokalemia!
TCA Overdose
Case 3
15 yo girl from rural area brought to ED by
family on bus
Found behind barn 6 hours prior
Decreased LOC, drooling, tears streaming
Covered in vomit and urine, feces
HR 101, RR 16, BP 90/60, T 36.5
Cholinergic Toxidrome
Salivation
Lacrimation
Urination
Defecation
GI pain
Emesis
Muscarinic
Effects
Cholinergic Toxidrome
Bradycardia
Bronchorrhea
Bronchospasm
“The Killer Bees”
Muscle fasiculations, miosis
Seizures, resp failure, paralysis
Common Cholinergics
Organophosphate insecticides
Diazinon, acephate, malathion, parathion
Carbamate insecticides
Systemic absorption by inhalation,
ingestion, transdermal and transcorneal
exposure
Organophosphate Poisoning
Bind irreversibly to acetylcholinesterase
Allows accumulation of Ach at NMJ
Cholinergic crisis causes central and
peripheral toxidrome
Must give antidotes before permanent
binding of organophosphates to
acetylcholinesterase (“ageing”)
Cholinergic Management
Decontamination and staff protection!
1:9 bleach : water
Airway management
Atropine sulphate 2 mg IV/IM
Every 5-20 mins until tracheobronchial
secretions dry up
Treats muscarinic symptoms
Pralidoxime 2 g IV/IM infused over 5 min
Treats nicotinic symptoms
Continue for 48 hrs if used
Fatal Pesticide Poisonings
258,000 deaths from pesticide selfpoisonings worldwide each year
Accounts for 30% suicides worldwide
Suicides in developing countries >>
developed countries likely explained by
very high case fatality rates in developing
countries
Case 4
26 yo male found on street by police
No family present
Eyes bloodshot, agitated, sweaty
Uncooperative
HR 126, BP 178/104, RR 20, T 38.5
Sympathomimetic Toxidrome
Mydriasis
Diaphoresis
Tachycardia
Hypertension
Hyperthermia
Seizures, rhabdomyolysis, MI, SAH
Common Sympathomimetics
Cocaine
Amphetamines
Khat (cathinone and cathine)
Sympathomimetic Management
IV fluids
Cooling (fans, mist, fluids)
Sedation: benzodiazepines
Seizures: benzodiazepines, phenobarbitol
HTN: benzodiazepines, nitroprusside
Chest pain: ASA, nitroglycerin
Avoid beta-blockers!
Monitor for rhabdomyolysis
Case 5
42 yo female
Found at home by daughter unresponsive
in bed
HR 90, RR 6, GCS 6, T 36.3, BP 92/60
Pupils pinpoint
Opioid Toxidrome
Respiratory depression
CNS depression/coma
Miosis
Opioid Management
Naloxone IV/IM/SC/ETT/IN
Airway management
Take Home Points
Approach to Tox Patient at Bedside
ABC
Oxygen, monitors, IV access
Full set of vitals including O2 sat
Gather history and collateral information
Check glucose (if possible)
Disability : GCS, pupils
“ABCDDDDD”
Detailed physical exam
Drugs: Consider universal antidotes
Decontamination
Draw Labs
Specific antidotes and supportive care
4 Universal Antidotes
Thiamine
Oxygen
Naloxone
Glucose
“TONG”
5 Decontamination Options
Activated charcoal
Syrup of Ipecac
Orogastric Lavage
Whole Bowel Irrigation
Urinary alkalinization
5 Decontamination Options
Activated charcoal
Syrup of Ipecac
Orogastric Lavage
Whole Bowel Irrigation
Urinary alkalinization
5 substances charcoal cannot adsorb
Hydrocarbons
Alcohols
Iron
Lithium
Lead
“HAILL”
5 Toxidromes
Sedative-Hypnotic
Anticholinergic
Cholinergic
Sympathomimetic
Opioid
Quiz Question 1
Which of the following is NOT considered a
universal antidote?
A) Dextrose
B) Atropine
C) Naloxone
D) Thiamine
E) Oxygen
Quiz Question 2
Why is it crucial to observe opiateintoxicated patients who have been given
naloxone for 2-3 hours in the ED?
A) Naloxone can induce tachycardia
B) Naloxone has a high incidence of anaphylaxis
C) Naloxone can cause depressed level of
consciousness
D) The half-life of naloxone is shorter than that of
the opiates it is reversing
E) Naloxone can precipitate urinary retention
Quiz Question 3
A 50 kg female ingested 30 tablets of 500
mg of acetaminophen 45 minutes ago.
What is the appropriate dose of activated
charcoal that should be given?
A) 50 g
B) 100g
C) 150g
D) Charcoal is contraindicated
E) Charcoal will not be effective
Quiz Question 4
Which drug overdoses are not likely to be
improved by the use of urinary
alkalinization as a decontamination
strategy?
A) Salicylates
B) Phenobarbitol
C) Isoniazid (INH)
D) Quinolone
E) Carbamates
Quiz Question 5
Which of the following symptoms are
muscarinic manifestations of
organophosphate overdose?
A) Lacrimation
B) Vomiting
C) Miosis
D) Muscle fasciculations
E) All of the above
General References
Gunnell D, Eddleston M, Phillips MR, Konradsen F.
The global distribution of fatal pesticide self-poisoning:
Systematic review. BMC Public Health 2007; 7:357.
Tintinalli’s Emergency Medicine. 7th Ed. Tintinalli JE et
al. 2011. McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
American Academy of Clinical Toxicology Position
Statement and Practice Guidelines on the Use of
Multi-Dose Activated Charcoal in the Treatment of
Acute Poisoning. Clinical Toxicology.1999;37(6): 731–
751.