Title: APAP and Salicylate Poisoning
1Salicylates
2-Salicylic Acid salts absorbed rapidly GI tract
serum concentrations 2/3 of dose in 1hr peak
2-4hrs -ASA hydrolyzed to free Salicylic acid
via RBC, Liver, Intestinal wall reversibly
binds albumin -Free Salicylate conjugates
excretion is Renal -If Poisoning underestimated
leads to metabolic acidosis, seizure,
hyperthermia, pulmonary edema, cerebral edema,
renal failure Death
3ASA dosing
- Adult acc. to the FDA
- 650mg po /4h for
- Initial dose can be 1000mg.
- ? max 3900mg/day for adults
- Child no more than 15mg/kg q4
4Factors which may delay salicylate absorption in
an OD situation
- Enteric coating
- Salicylate-induced pylorospasm
- Gastric outlet obstruction
- Concomitant ingestion of sustance which decreases
gastric motility
5Factors which enhance the toxicity of topical
salicylates (i.e. oil of wintergreen)?
- heat
- occlusive dressings
- young age (high BSA to weight ratio)
- inflammation
- psoriasis/break of the skin
- long application
- real danger is through oral ingestion of
topical ingestion.
6Acute vs. chronic
MORE DANGEROUS!
Features Acute Chronic Age Young
adult Older adult/infants Etiology OD Therapeut
ic misuse Co-ingest. Frequent Rare Past
history OD or psych pain/RF Presentation Early
Late Dehydration Moderate Severe Mental status
Normal(initially) Altered Serum conc 40 - 120
mg/dL 30 to 80 mg/dL Mortality Low w/
treatment High
7methylsalicylate
Free tissue SA
90 of free SA binds albumin at conc lt 10mg/dL
2.5 excreted unchanged in urine (pH independent)
8Metabolism in OD
- Metabolizing enzymes get saturated switch from
first ? zero order kinetics. - Decrease in albumin binding at toxic levels.
- Urinary excretion is fixed.
- SA weak acid
- at physiologic pH most SA is ionized ? does not
penetrate tissues well. - acidosis ? more unionized SA ? greater tissue
penetration.
9Mechanism of toxicity
Mechanism of toxicity -Salicylate stimulates
medullary respiratory center hyperpnea,
tachypnea ,respiratory alkalosis -Inhibition of
Krebs cycle ? ? amounts lactic pyruvic
acid. -Uncoupling oxidative phosphorylation ?
metabolism Temp, with ? CO2 production O2 use,
? glycolysis -?K Vomiting, ? Renal Na,K,HCO3
loss -Uncoupling OP also ? K by inhibiting
active transport
10Met acidosis in ASA
- Salicylate ion weak acid which contributes to
the acidosis. - Dehydration from hyperpnea, vomiting, diaphoresis
and hyper-thermia contributes to lactic acidosis. - Uncoupling of mitochondrial oxidative
phosphorylation ? anaerobic metabolism ? lactate
and pyruvate production. - Increased fatty acid metabolism (as a consequence
of uncoupling of oxydative phosphorylation) ?
lipolysis ? ketone formation. - In compensation for the initial respiratory
alkalosis the kidneys excrete bicarbonate which
later contributes to the metabolic acidosis. - Increased sodium and potassium accompany the
initial renal bicarbonate diuresis ? hypokalemia
? hydrogen ion shift out of cell to maintain
electrical neutrality. - Renal dysfunction ? accumulation of SA
metabolites which are acids sulfuric and
phosphoric acids.
11Clinical manifestations
- CNS tinnitus, decreased hearing, vertigo,
hallucinations, agitation, hyperactivity,
delirium, stupor, coma, lethargy, seizures,
cerebral edema - Hem hypoprothrombinemia, platelet dysfunction
and bleeding - GI n/v, hemorrhagic gastritis, decreased GI
motility, pylorospasm - Met fever, hyperglycemia, hypoglycemia, ketosis,
ketonuria - Pulm tachypnea
- Volume diaphoresis and dehydration.
12Treatment
- Treatment Goals prevent gt absorption, correct
fluid acid-base deficit excretion - Gastric lavage ,Activated charcoal ,Cathartics.
- Intubations ,ventilation and shock treatment in
severely intoxicated victem. - Urine alkalization with sodium bicarbonate to
correct acidosis. - Potassium replacement in case of hypokalemia.
- Vit K for treatment hypoprothrombinemia.
- Correct dehydration with saline and fluids.
- Treat pulmonary oedema with oxygen and
intubations. - Glucose to correct hypoglycaemia and to prevent
CNS depression. - Treat seizures with diazepam.
- Cooling blankets or ice tocorrect hyperpyrexia.
- DIALYSIS IF Coma/Seizure, Hepatic failure, Pulm
edema,or Severe acid-base imbalance
13Ion trapping
- ? the more acidic the compartment the more SA
will be NONionized because SA is a weak acid (the
stronger acids will dissociate and give off their
H first.) - the more basic a compartment the more IONIZED SA
will be because there is a relative lack of H ?
so because SA is an acid it will give off its H
and be ionized, i.e. trapped in that milieu.
14Indications for hemodialysis in SA poisoned
patients.
- Renal failure ,CHF
- Pulmonary edema or acute lung injury
- Refractory acidosis or electrolyte imbalance
despite maximal therapy - Persistent CNS symptoms