Title: Case Study 2: Symptomatic Bradycardia
1Case Study 2 Symptomatic Bradycardia
- Robert S. Hoffman, MD
- Director
- New York City Poison Center
2Objectives
- Understand the differential diagnosis of
drug-induced bradycardia - Explain the use of the laboratory in cases of
unknown bradycardia - Discuss the treatment of patients with known and
unknown causes of bradycardia
3Differential Diagnosis
- A 42 year old man presents to the hospital
complaining of weakness and dizziness following
an intentional drug overdose - He is pale and diaphoretic appearing but awake
- Blood pressure 62/30 mm Hg
- Pulse 40/minute slightly irregular
- Physical examination otherwise normal
4ECG
5EAPCCT Investigation of the Poisoned
Patient-Case Studies
Bordeaux, May 2010
6Question 1
- The most likely etiology of this patients
toxicity is - A. Digoxin
- B. Calcium channel blocker
- C. Beta blocker
- D. Clonidine
- E. Organophosphate
7Answer 1
- You can not be certain at this point
- A. Digoxin
- B. Calcium channel blocker
- C. Beta blocker
- D. Clonidine
- Sedation
- E. Organophosphate
- Muscarinic and nicotinic findings
8Physiology
9Physiology
10Physiology
11Physiology
12Beta Blocker
13Digoxin Toxicity
14EAPCCT Investigation of the Poisoned
Patient-Case Studies
Bordeaux, May 2010
15Question 2
- Which laboratory tests might be useful to help
narrow the differential diagnosis - A. Glucose
- B. Calcium
- C. Potassium
- D. Sodium
- E. Both A and C
16Answer 2
- Which laboratory tests might be useful to help
narrow the differential diagnosis - A. Glucose
- B. Calcium
- C. Potassium
- D. Sodium
- E. Both A and C
17Diagnosis and Prognosis
Bismuth C, et al Clin Toxicol 1973 6153-162
18- Composite endpoints
- Death
- Vasoactive drugs (epinephrine, etc)
- Pacemaker
19(No Transcript)
2022.2 mmol/L
21EAPCCT Investigation of the Poisoned
Patient-Case Studies
Bordeaux, May 2010
22Question 3
- Which ECG finding is MOST characteristic of
digoxin toxicity - A. Scooped ST segment
- B. Sinus bradycardia
- C. Atrial tachycardia with high degree A-V block
- D. Bidirectional ventricular tachycardia
- E. Slow atrial fibrillation
-
23Digoxin Effect
24Bradycardia
25Atrial Tachycardia with A-V Block
26More
27Bidirectional Ventricular Tachycardia
28Answer 3
- Which ECG finding is MOST characteristic of
digoxin toxicity - A. Scooped ST segment
- B. Sinus bradycardia
- C. Atrial tachycardia with high degree A-V block
- D. Bidirectional ventricular tachycardia
- E. Slow atrial fibrillation
-
29EAPCCT Investigation of the Poisoned
Patient-Case Studies
Bordeaux, May 2010
30Question 4
- Which rhythm is inconsistent with digoxin
toxicity - A. Sinus tachycardia
- B. Rapid atrial fibrillation
- C. Supraventricular tachycardia at 150/min
- D. Multifocal atrial tachycardia
- E. All of the above
31Answer 4
- Which rhythm is inconsistent with digoxin
toxicity - A. Sinus tachycardia
- B. Rapid atrial fibrillation
- C. Supraventricular tachycardia at 150/min
- D. Multifocal atrial tachycardia
- E. All of the above
32More Case Information
- ECG As shown previously
- Glucose 300 mg/dL (16.16 mmol/L)
- Serum potassium 4.8 mmol/L
- A fluid bolus of 1L of saline is given without
response - Blood pressure 72/40 mm Hg
- Pulse 45/min
33EAPCCT Investigation of the Poisoned
Patient-Case Studies
Bordeaux, May 2010
34Question 5
- Which of the following therapies is most
appropriate at this point? - A. Digoxin antibodies
- B. Epinephrine
- C. Glucagon
- D. Calcium
- E. Milrinone
35General Treatment
36Answer 5
- Which of the following therapies is most
appropriate at this point? - A. Digoxin antibodies
- B. Epinephrine
- C. Glucagon
- D. Calcium
- E. Milrinone
37Kline JA, Tomaszewski CA, Schroeder JD, Raymond
RM Insulin is a superior antidote for
cardiovascular toxicity induced by verapamil in
the anesthetized canine. J Pharmacol Exp Ther
1993267744-50
38More Case Information
- A serum digoxin concentration is reported as
non-detectable. - The patient is given the following with little
improvement - 3 grams of calcium chloride
- Escalating doses of glucagon (up to 10 mg)
- Amrinone
- Dopamine continuous infusion
39EAPCCT Investigation of the Poisoned
Patient-Case Studies
Bordeaux, May 2010
40Question 6
- Which therapies might be indicated next
- A. Hemodialysis/hemoperfusion
- B. Pacemaker
- C. Intra-aortic balloon pump
- D. High-dose insulin euglycemia therapy
- E. Intravenous fat emulsion
41Answer 6
- Which therapies might be indicated next
- A. Hemodialysis/hemoperfusion
- B. Pacemaker
- C. Intra-aortic balloon pump
- D. High-dose insulin euglycemia therapy
- E. Intravenous fat emulsion
42Cardiac Energy Dynamics
- Normal Function
- Preferred Substrate
- Fatty Acids
- High energy
- Stable pool
43Cardiac Energy Dynamics
- Sick hearts
- Convert to glucose
- Immediate energy
- Limited availability
- Large swings
- Basis for
- Tight glucose control
- High dose insulin/euglycemia therapy
44Kline JA, Tomaszewski CA, Schroeder JD, Raymond
RM Insulin is a superior antidote for
cardiovascular toxicity induced by verapamil in
the anesthetized canine. J Pharmacol Exp Ther
1993267744-50
45Kline JA, et al. Cardiovasc Res 199734289-298
46Yuan TH, et al Insulin-glucose as adjunctive
therapy for severe calcium channel antagonist
poisoning. J Toxicol Clin Toxicol 199937463-474
47Technique
- Bolus 1 unit/kg of regular insulin
- Follow with a continuous infusion
- 0.5-2.0 units/kg/hour of regular insulin
- Add glucose as necessary
- 0.5-1 gm/kg/hr
- Allow mild hypokalemia (only mild)
48Lipid Emulsion Therapy
- Mechanism of action
- 2 Prevailing hypotheses
- Lipid sink theory
- Bioenergetic theory
49Lipid Emulsion Therapy
- Lipid sink theory
- Intralipid partitions the drug into a lipid phase
creating a concentration gradient for removal of
the drug from the target organ
Weinberg GL Reg Anesth Pain. 200631296
50Tebutt S Intralipid prolongs survival in a rat
model of verapamil toxicity. Acad Emerg Med
200613134
51ACADEMIC EMERGENCY MEDICINE 200714105
52Methods
- 14 dogs instrumented extensively
- Verapamil toxicity, defined as a 50 decrease in
MAP - All dogs got atropine and calcium chloride (15
mg/kg q 5min) - Randomized
- IFE (7 mg/kg of 20) IV
- Or equivalent volumes of 0.9 normal saline
53Results 1
54Results 2
55Ann Emerg Med. 200749178-185.
56Methods
- 30 sedated and ventilated clomipramine poisoned
rabbits - At 50 MAP given
- 0.9 NaCl 12 mL/kg
- OR 8.4 sodium bicarbonate 3 mL/kg
- OR 20 Intralipid 12 mL/kg
57Results
58Human Case Reports
- Bupivacaine, Levobupivacaine, Ropivacaine,
Mepivacaine - Bupropion and lamotrigine
- Beta blockers
- Haloperidol and other antipsychotics
- Calcium channel blockers
- Tricyclic antidepressants
59Lipid Emulsion
- Weinberg Protocol
- Bolus
- 1.5 mL/kg over one minute
- Repeat every 3-5 minutes
- Maximum 8 mL/kg
- Infusion
- 0.25 mL/kg/min until hemodynamic recovery
- Can increase to 0.5 mL/kg/min if needed
60Indications For Digibind In Acute Overdose
- Serum potassium over 5.0 mEq/L
- Any life-threatening dysrhythmia
- Redefine for digoxin
- A digoxin level over 10-15 ng/mL
- Need for prolonged ICU observation
- Mixed overdose with calcium calcium channel
blocker
61EAPCCT Investigation of the Poisoned
Patient-Case Studies
Bordeaux, May 2010
62Question 7
- What is the correct dose of digoxin-specific Fab
in an adult patient with an acute overdose and
severe toxicity? - A. 1 vial
- B. 2 vials
- C. 5 vials
- D. 10 vials
- E. 20 vials
63Answer 7
- What is the correct dose of digoxin-specific Fab
in an adult patient with an acute overdose and
severe toxicity? - A. 1 vial
- B. 2 vials
- C. 5 vials
- D. 10 vials
- E. 20 vials
64Digibind Dosing
- Empiric dose
- 10 to 20 vials in acute overdose
- Amount ingested known
- Each vial binds 0.5 mg of digoxin
- Assume 100 bioavailability
- Divide
mg ingested
0.5 mg/vial
65Digibind dosing
level (ng/mL) X Wt (Kg) X 5.6 L/kg
0.5 mg/vial X 1000
level (ng/mL) X wt (kg)
100
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67Summary
- Understand the physiology
- Understand the toxicology
- Define the physiology
- Labs
- ECG
- Clinical status
- Tailor the antidotes to the physiology and
toxicology
68Clinical Clues
- Blood pressure
- Preserved with digoxin
- Mental status
- Preserved with CCB
- Electrolytes
- K increased with digoxin, less so with beta
blockers - Glucose increased with calcium channel blockers