Title: General Management of the Poisoned Patient Clin Pharm 501
1General Management of the Poisoned Patient(Clin
Pharm 501)
- Donna Seger, M.D
- Medical Director
- Tennessee Poison Center
- Assistant Professor of Medicine and
- Emergency Medicine
2Intentional Poisoning
- An overlooked category of child abuse
3Adolescents
- 90 girls
- 25 - M.D. with 1 week
- Problems parents, boy or girlfriend, school,
work - 2/3 problems improve in 1 month
- 14 repeaters
4Modes of Exposure
- Ingestion 75
- Dermal 7.9
- Inhalation 6.3
- Ocular 5.3
- Envenomation 3.6
- 2001 TESS Data
5Management Principles
6History
- Unreliable
- What
- When
- How much
- Accidental or self-inflicted
- First time or recurrent
- PMH
7Physical Exam
- Temp!
- Neuro-external signs of trauma
- Mental status
- Apparently unconscious
8Emergency Treatment
- A-airway
- B-breathing
- C-circulation
- Consider glucagon and/or insulin/glucose for
hemodynamic instability in the young previously
healthy poisoned patient - Supportive Care highest priority
- Coma ? D50, Narcan, monitor
9Laboratory Analysis
- Time is of the essence in comatose patient or
hemodynamically unstable patient - ABG will help you determine urgency
10AGA
M ethanol U remia D KA P araldehyde I NH or
idiopathic lactic acidosis E thylene Glycol S
alicylates
11Toxicology Screen
- Comma
- Fluctuating LOC
- Medical complications
- New Onset psychosis
12Axioms
- Negative serum
- Serum level implications
- Lethal level
- Treat patient, not lab values
13Quantitation
- APAP
- CO
- Digoxin
- EtOH
- Ethylene Glycol
- Heavy Metals
- Iron
- Lidocaine
- Lithium
- Methanol
- Methemoglobin
- Phenobarbital
- Phenytoin
- Salicylates
- Theophylline
14Antidotes
- Beta Blocker Glucagon
- Benzodiazepine-?Flumazenil
- CO-O2-NBO v. HBO
- CN-CN Kit
- Digoxin Digibind
- Ethylene glycol EtOH 4MP
- Methanol EtOH 4MP
15Antidotes (cont)
- OP Atropine PAM
- Opiates Naloxone
- Anticholinergic Physostigmine
- TCA NaHCO3
- Methgb Methylene Blue
- Acetaminophen - NAC
16Flumazenil
- Contraindications
- ?TCA
- Hx head trauma
- Hx seizures
- Chronic BZDP use
17EXPOSED BODY SURFACEDILUTION IS THE SOLUTION
TO POLLUTION
18Emesis vs Gastric Lavage
19Ipecac
Emetine
Alkaloids
Caphaeline
Early and late stages of vomiting
20Toxicities
- GI vomiting and diarrhea
- Neuro-myopathy
- Cardiac - ? HR, ? QT, ? PR, inv T
21There is no evidence that Ipecac improves outcome
22Gastric Lavage
- Protect Airway
- Large Bore Tube (30-40 F)
- LLD Position
- Lavage Until Clear
- External Massage
23There is no evidence that Gastric Lavage improves
outcome
24Is Gastric EmptyingNecessary????
25Management of Acutely Poisoned Patients Without
Gastric Emptying
Kulig et al. Annals of Emergency Medicine 1985
26- Odd number days
- Gastric emptying
- Even-number days
- No gastric emptying
Patient alert, cooperative
1
2
Syrup of Ipecac activated charcoal
Oral activated charcoal only
Patient obtained, convulsing, intubated,
uncooperative
4
3
Gastric lavage, Activated charcoal
Activated charcoal by nasogastric tube without
lavage
Kulig et al. Am Emerg Med 1985
27- No difference in (1 vs 2 and 3 vs 4)
- Severity of intoxication
- Patients admitted
- Clinical deterioration
- Lavage obtained patients did better than those
given NG charcoal - Within 1 hour
28Conclude
- Satisfactory outcome without gastric emptying
- Ipecac no benefit hours after OD
- Gastric lavage no benefit 1 hour
- NO MANDATORY GASTRIC EMPTYING
29Prospective Evaluation of Gastric Emptying in the
Self-Poisoned Patient
Merigian et al.Am J of Emerg Med, November 1990
30- EVEN DAYS
- Asymptomatic Patient
- Activated Charcoal (Oral)
- ODD DAYS
- Asymptomatic Patient
- Observation Only
- Symptomatic Patient
- Gastric emptying
- (Ipecac-Induced Emesis
- or Gastric Lavage)
- Symptomatic Patient
- Activated Charcoal
- (oral or nasogastric)
- Activated Charcoal
- Oral or Ewald Gastric Tube
31Conclusion
- Gastric Decontamination Limited Clinical Benefit
32Prospective Evaluation of Gastric Emptying in the
Self-Poisoned Patient
Pond Medical Jnl of Australia 1995
33ODD DAYS Emptied AC
EVEN DAYS AC
34CONCLUSIONS
- No difference in outcome
- Clinical course
- Hospital stay
- complications
35Single-Dose Activated Charcoal
36Single-Dose oral Activated Charcoal in the
Treatment of the Self-Poisoned patient A
Prospective, Randomized Controlled Trial
- Merigian K, Blaho K Jnl of Therapeutics 2002
37- ODD DAYS
- -Supportive Care
38Conclusions
- Vomiting in 23 receiving AC and 13 receiving
supportive care - No difference in length of stay
- No difference in incidence of complications
39There is no evidence that SDAC improves outcome
40MDAC
- Multiple dose activated charcoal
- Gastric dialysis-pulls drug across the blood/gut
membrane due to osmotic gradient of drug - phenobarbital, carbamazepine, theophylline,
dapsone, quinine
41Contraindications
- Bowel Perforation
- Bowel Obstruction
- GI Hemorrhage
- Hemodynamic Instability
42Whole Bowel Irrigation
- Administration of 1-2 liters/h of go-lytely for
first 5-6 hours following ingestion - Mechanical removal of toxin
43WBI
- Fe, Pb, As, Zn
- Sustained release (CCB)
- Packets of illicit drugs
44Contraindications
- Coma
- Seizure
- CNS depression
- TCA
- Caustics
- Petroleum distillates
- Strychnine
- Camphor
45Complications
46Elimination of Absorbed Substances
47Elimination of Absorbed Substance
- Forced diuresis of no benefit
- Ion trapping via alkaline diuresis for specific
toxins
48Alkaline Diuresis
49Indications for Hemodialysis/Hemoperfusion
- Deterioration despite supportive care
- Depression of midbrain function
- Complications of coma
- Hepatic, cardiac, or renal insufficiency
50Drug Characteristics
- Enterohepatic circulation
- Small VD
- Little protein binding
51Psychiatric Evaluation
- Suicide Risk Factors
- Older solitary male
- Suicide plan
- Previous attempts
- Recent lost
- Chronic serious illness
- History of drug or alcohol abuse
- Psychosis
- Sense of helplessness, hopelessness
52Legal Aspects
- No court has upheld a patients right to refuse
medical treatment subsequent to be a drug
overdose. - A patient who has attempted suicide has lost the
right to refuse treatment
53 23 y-o found unconscious by friends
- Suicide note took pills
- To ED
54- Unconscious
- Unresponsive
- BP 102/80
- HR 120
- Treatment?
55 Airway B C
56ETI
- Unconscious patients do not have protective
airway reflexes
57 Airway Breathing C
58Ventilate
59 Airway Breathing Circulation
60Blood PressurePulseHemodynamic
instability?????
61Hemodynamic Instability in the poisoned patient
- Fluid (2 liters)
- Glucagon
- Insulin/glucose
62Antidote
63 64Physical Exam
65- Temperature
- Trauma
- Illness
- Drug abuse
66Laboratory Analysis
67ABGElectrolytesGlucoseCBCUDS
68GID
69?Gastric Lavage?Charcoal
70Imaging Studies
71Head CTCXR(C-spine)
72Treatment?
73Supportive Care
74UDS
- Benzoylecgonine
- Marijuana
- Benzodiazepines