Title: Toxicology Case Studies: Management of Toxin Induced Cardiovascular Effects
1Toxicology Case Studies Management of Toxin
Induced Cardiovascular Effects
- Toxicology Science of Anecdotes
- very few randomized controlled trials
- level of evidence often poor
- most data
- case reports
- case series (LOE 5)
- animal studies (LOE 6)
2 Cocaine AssociatedMyocardial Ischemia
mechanism
- ? myocardial O2 consumption
- coronary artery vasoconstriction /or spasm
- coronary artery thrombosis
- ? platelet activation
- ? platelet aggregation
- potentiate thromboxane production
3Management of Cocaine Associated AMI
- Oxygen (I)
- ASA (IIa)
- nitrates (IIa)
- benzodiazepines (IIa)
- phentolamine (IIb)
- angiography /- PCI
- ß Blockers contraindicated (III)
- thrombolysis contraindicated
- intracoronary?
4Acute Cocaine Reaction
5Cocaine dysrhythmias/ conduction abnormalities
- sinus tachy, SVT
- atrial fib/flutter
- v tach, v fibrillation
- widened QRS
- bundle branch block
- Mechanism
- hyperadrenergic state
- sodium channel blockade
6Management of Acute Cocaine Toxicity
7 V Tach and V Fib
associated with cocaine toxicity
- first line drug therapy for cocaine associated VT
or refractory VF - sodium bicarbonate (Class IIa, LOE 5)
- lidocaine (Class IIb, LOE 5)
- non-selective ? Blockers (i.e. propranolol) are
contraindicated (Class III) - epinephrine should be avoided
8Tricyclic AntidepressantsPharmacologic Actions
- inhibit amine uptake (NE, 5HT)
- Na Channel blockade
- antihistamine
- antimuscarinic
- alpha receptor blockade
- K Channel antagonism
- GABA-A receptor antagonism
9Na channel blockade
- quinidine/ membrane stabilizing
- inhibits Na influx through voltage dependant
Na channels - altered depol./repol. and conduction
- impaired contractility
- prolonged phase 0 of action potential
- worsened by
- increased HR
- decreased Na
- acidemia
10Na channel blockade
- EKG changes
- increased PR interval/other conduction delays
- widened QRS
- rightward axis deviation of terminal 40ms
- terminal axis 120-270
- ? RV conduction system more susceptible to Na
channel blockade
11Other drugs that cause sodium channel blockade
- antihistamines (dimenhydrinate)
- cocaine
- phenothiazines
- class 1A 1C antidysrhythmics
- norpropoxyphene
- beta blockers (propranolol, metoprolol)
12 Treatment of TCA Cardiac ToxicitySodium
Channel Blockade
- arterial pH of 7.5-7.55 (IIa, LOE 5)
- hyperventilation
- sodium bicarbonate
- bolus 1-2meq/kg
- continuous IV 2 amps in D5W with 20-40 meq/L
_at_2-3 cc/kg - procainamide is contraindicated (Class III, LOE
8)
13Mechanism alkalinization of blood
- increased protein binding
- treats acidosis
- improves conduction through sodium channels (Na
vs HCO3) - indications
- QRSgt 100ms
- hypotension refractory to fluids
- ventricular dysrhythmia
- seizure
14CCB ß blockers Pathophysiology
- ß blockers
- inhibit
- ß1 cardiac
- inotropic
- chronotropic
- ß2
- bronchodilation
- smooth muscle relaxation
- CCBs
- inhibit voltage sensitive channels
- phase 2 of action potential
- SA node
- AV node
- cardiac muscle
- smooth muscle
15Cardiovascular Effects CCBs/ß-blockers
- hypotension/shock
- bradycardia
- heart block
- conduction abnormalities
- asystole
- pulmonary edema (rare)
16Shock in CCB/ ß Blocker Overdose
- crystalloid bolus and infusion
- calcium (IIa)
- glucagon
- catecholamines (high dose) (IIb)
- insulin pump therapy (Indeterminate)
- circulatory assist devices (IIb, LOE 6
- cardiac bypass
- IABP
17Glucagon
- produced by the ? cells of the pancreatic islets
- ? c-AMP by stimulating adenyl cyclase
- does not ? cardiac irritability
- glucagon receptors in the heart
- dose 5-10 mg bolus
- infusion 1-5 mg/h
- onset 1-3 minutes, peak 5-7 min
- adverse effects nv
-
18CCB/ ß-Blocker Shock
- DKA like state
- prevent adequate myocardial utilization of
carbohydrates - ? insulin release from pancreas
- myocardial peripheral insulin resistance
- ? insulin substrate delivery due to ? cardiac
output
19Insulin-Euglycemia Treatment
- myocardium switches from fatty acid to
carbohydrate oxidation - increases lactate oxidation
- eliminates fatty acid oxidation
- promotes carbohydrate oxidation
- associated with ?mechanical performance
(contractility, LV pressure) - insulin dose 0.1-1.0 units/kg/hr (av 0.5)
- glucose to maintain euglycemia
20Digitalis mechanism of action
- Inhibits Na-K ATPase pump
- ? intracellular Ca2
- ? intracellular Na
- ? extracellular K
- ? vagal effects
- activation of sympathetic tone
21Cardiac Effects of Digitalis
- negative chronotropism
- positive inotropism
- slows sinus node impulse formation
- enhances intra-atrial conduction
- slowing of conduction velocity (AV node)
- ? rate of spontaneous depolarization
(ventricles) -
22Acute vs Chronic Toxicity
- Chronic
- usually elderly
- heart disease
- digoxin ? or therapeutic
- K normal to low
- noncardiac symptoms prominent
- various dysrhythmias
- Acute
- young, normal heart
- ? digoxin level
- K normal to high
- less noncardiac Sx
- AV conduction blocks more common
-
23Digoxin toxicity cardiac effects
- Acute
- sinus impulse formation disturbances
- sinus bradycardia
- SA arrest
- SA block
- AV conduction disturbances
- 1AVB
- 2AVB
- 3AVB
-
- Chronic
- PAT with block
- nonparoxysmal junctional tachycardia
- bidirectional v tach
- AV dissociation
- type 2AVB
- PVCs
- v tach
- v fib
24Indications for DIGIBIND
- Acute Overdose
- bradydysrhythmias unresponsive to atropine
- K gt 5.5 mmol/L
- tachydysrhythmia unresponsive to conservative
treatment - Chronic Intoxication
- dysrhythmia unresponsive to conservative
treatment