Title: Pediatric Toxicology
1Pediatric Toxicology
- Jay Fisher MD
- Pediatric Emergency Services
- University Medical Center
2Epidemiology
- 2.4 million events reported to U.S. poison
centers annually - 50 are in children lt 6 years.
- Less than 50 deaths annually.
- 10 Fold decrease in deaths since 1950
3Reason For Decrease Prevention
- Packaging legislation child resistant closures
- Safer medications (tetracyclic gt tricyclic)
- Consumer Product Safety measures
- Poison Centers 1-800-222-1222
- Anticipatory Guidance
4Clinical Approach - History
- Details are extremely important and will strongly
impact management. - Identify the potential poisons.
- Create an accurate time line.
- How long was the child unattended?
- Medications in the home, visitors?
5Symptoms and Physical Exam Toxidrome?
- Vomiting, diarrhea, lacrimation?
- Loss of conciousness, seizure, rash?
- Vital signs
- Mental status
6Anti-cholinergic Poisoning
- Red as a beet Diffuse erythema
- Dry as a bone Dry mucous membranes
- Mad as a hatter Confusion, psychosis, seizures
- Hot as Hades Temperature elevation,
tachycardia, hypertension. - Blind as a bat - Mydriasis, sluggish to light
7Cholinergic Excess - SLUDGE
- Salivation
- Lacrimation
- Urination
- Defecation
- Gastric Cramping
- Emesis
8Sympathomimetics
- Agitation, confusion, combative, convulsion
- Tachycardia, Hypertension, Elevated temperature
- Mydriasis, Reactive to Light
- Diaphoresis
9Opiates
- Euphoria, somnolence, unresponsive
- Pinpoint pupils
- Respiratory depression
- Bradycardia, hypotension
- Decreased body temperature
10Serotonin Syndrome
- Typically occurs with patients on multiple
agents, particularly SSRIs - Case reports of kids with SS after a single dose
of some SSRIs.
11Serotonin Syndrome
- Autonomic instability, fever
- Confusion, seizures, agitation
- Increased tone in the lower extremities
- Myoclonus
- Reminiscent of Neuroleptic Malignant Syndrome
12NMS vs SS
- Higher fever
- Develops slower (days vs hours)
- Rigidity and bradykinesis as opposed to myoclonus
and hyperkinesis - More extra-pyramidal symptoms jaw stiffness,
athetosis
13Clinical InterventionGastrointestinal
Decontamination
- Ipecac Never
- Gastric Lavage Rarely
- Activated Charcoal Infrequent
- Whole Bowel Irrigation Rarely
- Laparotomy Very Rarely
14Activate Charcoal A legitimate controversy
15Activated Charcoal An adsorbant.
- Burn wood, oxidize it at high temperatures with
steam or CO2. - Creates an internal trellis of pores with a
surface area of 2 m2 per gram! - Dose 1 g/ kg.
- Sorbitol additive is not necessary.
16Adult Volunteer Studies Reduction of Absorbed
Dose
17Am Ass. of Clin Tox Position Paper -2005
- There is no evidence charcoal improves clinical
outcomes. - Based on volunteer studies. Charcoal may be
considered in high risk patients presenting
within one hour of ingestion.
18Fleisher Ludwig - 2005
- Continues to recommend activated charcoal
routinely in poisonings in which the patient
presents to the ED and the toxin is still
believed to be in the stomach. - Still advocates multi-dose activated charcoal (GI
dialysis) for certain poisons- theophylline,
phenobarb, carbamazepine
19Activated Charcoal No Utility
- Alcohols
- Iron
- Lithium
- Caustics
20Activated Charcoal - Contraindications
- Patient with an unprotected airway.
- Caustics Vomiting may worsen esophageal injury
- Hydrocarbons Vomiting increases risk of
aspiration pneumonitis.
21Activated Charcoal Why not?
- Labor intensive.
- Can often require naso-gastric tube placement to
give a full dose. - If patient decompensates, refluxing charcoal can
be a big problem. - Several case reports of aspiration pneumonia
leading to death in children.
22Side Effects
23Poisonings What kills children?
- Hydrocarbons
- Cardiovascular drugs
- Narcotics
- Tri-cyclic antidepressants
- Industrial Chemicals
- Envenomations
- Anti-convulsants
24When a Pill can Kill
- Calcium Channel Blockers
- Clonidine/ Other Imidazoles
- TCAs
- Theophylline
- Sulfonylureas
- Diphenoxylate (Lomotil)
- Camphor and Methylsalicylate
25Antidotes
- Desferoxamine
- Sodium Bicarbonate
- Calcium Chloride/ Gluconate
- Methylene Blue
- Octreatide
- Pralidoxime
- Vitamin K
26Cases In Our Own Backyard
2718 mos old female brought by EMS with AMS
- No history of trauma
- No infectious prodrome
- No history of toxic exposures
28Physical Exam
- Temperature 99
- HR 240
- RR 26
- BP 121/76
- Alternating horizontal vertical nystagmus
- Extensor posturing
29PE - continued
- Abdomen distended, soft.
- Skin- upper face and trunk bright red
- Pupils 5 mm and reactive
30Case Progression
- Child requires benzodiapines, intubation,
mechanical ventilation and bicarb. - Blood serology returns positive for
amitriptyline, which a visiting grandparent is
taking. - No further arrythmias develop.
- Patients discharged without sequelae several days
later.
312.5 yo female with lethargy
- Sudden onset of decreased responsiveness
describe. - No toxic exposures noted.
- No vomiting, no rash.
- No past medical history
32Acute AMS
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3515 yo female with Celexa overdose
- Patient is on Celexa chronically for depression.
- Patient has a history of overdose in the past.
- Ingestion occurred two hours ago.
- Mother is forcefully demanding immediate
intervention!
36Physical Exam
- Nursing assessment Patient will not cooperate
with assessment. - Vitals T 96.9/ HR 144/ RR 23/ BP
167/71/ sat 100 on RA - Eyes closed but would open to command.
- Answers questions appropriately.
- Hyperventilating intermittently.
- Intermittent myoclonus.
37Case Progression
- During discussion of the risks and benefits of
gastric emptying with the mother, the patient
starts seizing, loses her airway, and requires
intubation. - The patients seizures are treated with
lorazepam. - Patient is transferred to Monte Vista several
days later without sequelae.
3815 yo arguing with boyfriend
- Ingested an ounce of rubbing alcohol to get a
buzz after arguing with boyfriend. - Vomited shortly after ingestion.
- Known to be an abuser of ethanol and marijuana.
- Denies suicidal intent or ideation.
39Physical Exam
- Awake, alert, cooperative.
- Vitals T 98/ HR 102/ RR 18/ BP 120/72
- Negative remainder of physical exam.
40Case Progression
- Child is discharged to follow-up with PMD in a
couple of days. - Vomiting and abdominal pain worsens over the next
six hours. - Patient returns to ED and admits to taking 30
acetaminophen tablets with the rubbing alcohol 8
hours ago. - 8 hour level 140 mcg/ml
41Acetaminophen Overdose
- Most common agent ingested by teenagers during
suicide. - Overdose very well tolerated by young children.
- Over 150 mg/kg in a child, 10 to 15 grams in an
adult can cause toxicity. - N-Acetyl Cysteine eliminates toxicity if given
within 8 hours of ingestion, reduces toxicity up
to 16 hours after ingestion.
42APAP and Mucomyst
- APAP metabolized by three separate pathways.
- P450 pathway creates a toxic intermediate which
usually is bound to glutathione and rendered
harmless. - With glutathione depleted, toxic intermediate
induces hepatitis. - NAC repletes glutathione