Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult (121 page)

Read Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult Online

Authors: Jeffrey J. Schaider,Adam Z. Barkin,Roger M. Barkin,Philip Shayne,Richard E. Wolfe,Stephen R. Hayden,Peter Rosen

Tags: #Medical, #Emergency Medicine

BOOK: Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult
6.42Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
PRE HOSPITAL
  • Transport pill/pill bottles to ED
  • Calcium for bradycardic/unstable patient with confirmed CCB overdose
INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY
  • ABCs:
    • Airway protection, as indicated
    • Supplemental oxygen, as needed
    • 0.9% NS IV access
  • Hemodynamic monitoring
ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
Goals
  • HR >60 beats/min
  • Systolic BP >90 mm Hg
  • Adequate urine output
  • Improving level of consciousness
GI-Decontamination
  • Syrup of ipecac: Contraindicated in the pre-hospital and ED setting
  • Activated charcoal:
    • May be helpful, especially in the presence of coingestants
Calcium
  • Usually only transiently effective
  • Calcium gluconate (10%):
    • Contains 0.45 mEq Ca
      2+
      /mL
    • Does not cause tissue necrosis as calcium chloride does
    • Calcium gluconate: Preferred agent in an acidemic patient
  • Calcium chloride (10%):
    • Contains 1.36 mEq Ca
      2+
      /mL (3 times more calcium than calcium gluconate)
    • Can cause tissue necrosis and sloughing with extravasation
    • Very irritating to veins
  • Follow serum calcium levels if repeated doses of calcium administered.
  • Contraindicated in known digoxin toxicity because calcium may cause serious adverse effects in this setting
Bradycardia/Hypotension
  • IV fluids:
    • Administer cautiously in the hypotensive patient.
    • Swan-Ganz catheter or central venous pressure (CVP) monitoring to help follow volume status
  • Atropine usually ineffective
  • High-dose insulin (HDI):
    • CCBs cause myocardial insulin resistance and inhibit insulin release from pancreatic islet cells
      • Results in inefficient fatty acid metabolism
    • HDI promotes more efficient myocardial carbohydrate metabolism and has been shown to improve hemodynamic function
  • Vasopressor agents:
    • No clear evidence that 1 agent is more effective than another
    • Institute invasive monitoring to help guide treatment.
    • Dopamine:
      • β
        1
        -Receptor agonist at low doses, which causes a positive inotropic effect on the myocardium
      • α-Receptor agonist at higher doses, which leads to vasoconstriction
    • Epinephrine:
      • Potent α- and β-receptor agonist
  • Amrinone:
    • Selective phosphodiesterase inhibitor
    • Indirectly increases cAMP leading to increased inotropy
  • Electrical pacing: When other treatment options have failed
  • Potential future therapies:
    • Hypertonic sodium bicarbonate
    • IV fat emulsion (20% intralipid)
MEDICATION
  • Amrinone: Loading dose 0.75 mg/kg; maintenance drip 2–20 μg/kg/min; titrate for effect
  • Atropine: 0.5 mg (peds: 0.02 mg/kg) IV; repeat 0.5–1 mg IV (peds: 0.04 mg/kg)
  • Calcium chloride: 5–10 mL of 10% solution slow IVP (peds: 0.2–0.25 mL/kg; repeat in 10 min if necessary) followed by infusion 20–50 mg/kg/h
  • Calcium gluconate: 10–20 mL of 10% solution slow IVP (peds: 1 mL/kg; may repeat in 10 min if necessary)
  • Dextrose: 50 mL of 50% solution (peds: 0.25 g/kg of 25% solution)
  • Dopamine: 2–20 μg/kg/min; titrate to effect
  • Epinephrine: 1–2 μg/min (peds: 0.01 mg/kg or 0.1 mL/kg 1:10,000); titrate to effect
  • Norepinephrine: Start 2–4 μg/min IV; titrate up to 1–2 μg/kg/min IV
  • Potassium: 40 mEq PO or IV
High-dose Insulin Treatment Protocol
  • Should be considered if response to fluid resuscitation is inadequate
  • Insulin (regular insulin): 1 IU/kg bolus IV followed by 0.5–1 IU/kg/h titrated up to clinical response
  • Administer dextrose if blood glucose <200 mg/dL
  • Administer potassium if serum potassium <2.5 mEq/L
  • Monitor serum glucose and potassium concentrations every 30 min for the 1st 4 hr
  • Approximate 24-hr insulin requirement: 1,500 U of regular insulin for adult patient
First Line
  • IV fluids
  • Calcium
  • HDI
  • Vasopressor agents
Second Line
  • Amrinone
  • IV fat emulsion
FOLLOW-UP
DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
  • Admit symptomatic patients to a monitored bed for hemodynamic monitoring.
  • Admit all patients who ingested sustained-release CCBs for 24-hr observation and monitoring owing to the potential delay in symptoms.
Discharge Criteria

Discharge asymptomatic patients 8 hr after ingestion of immediate-release preparation.

FOLLOW-UP RECOMMENDATIONS
  • Psychiatric evaluation for all suicidal patients
  • Poison prevention guidance for parents of pediatric accidental ingestion
PEARLS AND PITFALLS
  • Consider CCB toxicity in patients presenting hypotensive and bradycardic.
  • Consider suicidal gesture in patients presenting with CCB toxicity.
  • Consider HDI with dextrose and potassium if fluid resuscitation not rapidly effective.
ADDITIONAL READING
  • Greene SL, Gawarammana I, Wood DM, et al. Relative safety of hyperinsulinaemia/euglycaemia therapy in the management of calcium channel blocker overdose: A prospective observational study.
    Intensive Care Med
    . 2007;33:2019–2024.
  • Levine M, Boyer EW, Pozner CN, et al. Assessment of hyperglycemia after calcium channel blocker overdoses involving diltiazem or verapamil.
    Crit Care Med
    . 2007;35:2071–2075.
  • Shepherd G. Treatment of poisoning caused by beta-adrenergic and calcium-channel blockers.
    Am J Health Syst Pharm
    . 2006;63:1828–1835.
  • Shepherd G, Klein-Schwartz W. High-dose insulin therapy for calcium-channel blocker overdose.
    Ann Pharmacother
    . 2005;39:923–930.
See Also (Topic, Algorithm, Electronic Media Element)

β-Blocker, Poisoning

CODES
ICD9

972.9 Poisoning by other and unspecified agents primarily affecting the cardiovascular system

ICD10
  • T46.1X1A Poisoning by calcium-channel blockers, accidental, init
  • T46.1X2A Poisoning by calcium-channel blockers, self-harm, init
  • T46.1X4A Poisoning by calcium-channel blockers, undetermined, init
CANDIDIASIS, ORAL
Derrick D. Fenchel

Deepi G. Goyal
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
  • Infection of oral mucosa with any species of Candida
  • Up to 80% of isolates are
    Candida albicans
    (most common),
    Candida glabrata, and Candida tropicalis
    .
  • Candida normally present as oral flora in 60% of the healthy population.
  • Variations include:
    • Pseudomembranous (thrush)
    • Chronic and acute atrophic candidiasis
    • Angular cheilitis
    • Hyperplastic candidiasis
  • More common in neonates, elderly, and immunosuppressed individuals
  • Usually benign course in healthy patients
  • In immunocompromised patients, more likely to be recurrent and a non-
    albicans
    species
  • May represent an early manifestation of AIDS in HIV-infected patients
  • Typically localized
  • Risk factors for systemic infection:
    • AIDS
    • Diabetes
    • Hospitalization
    • Immunosuppressive therapy
    • Malignancy
    • Neutropenia
    • Organ transplantation
    • Prematurity
ETIOLOGY
  • Usually overgrowth of
    C. albicans
    from alterations in intraoral environment
  • May be medication induced—commonly antimicrobials, inhaled or systemic steroids, chemotherapy, immunosuppressive agents
  • Immunocompromised patients
  • Alterations or impairment of salivary flow:
    • Anticholinergic or psychotropic medications
    • Sjögren disease
    • Head or neck radiation
  • Presence of dentures or other orthodontics:
    • Occurs in up to 50–65% of denture wearers
    • Common etiology for chronic atrophic candidiasis
  • Interruption of epithelial barrier (cheek biting)
  • Endocrinopathies (diabetes, hypothyroidism)
Pediatric Considerations
  • Acute pseudomembranous candidiasis (thrush) is common in infancy likely because of immaturity of their immune system and lack of mature oral flora
  • Initial presentation may be feeding difficulty secondary to dysphagia
  • May have concurrent Candida diaper rash
  • Consider maternal treatment if breastfeeding:
    • Maternal breast colonization may be cause for persistent thrush. Query maternal nipple pain, burning, itching, or cracked skin

Other books

A Splendid Gift by Alyson Richman
Extras by Scott Westerfeld
The African Equation by Yasmina Khadra
Stringer by Anjan Sundaram
Redemption by Jambrea Jo Jones
Ring of Fire by Taylor Lee
Everlasting Sin by J. S. Cooper
Possession by Celia Fremlin
Transformation: Zombie Crusade VI by Vohs, J.W., Vohs, Sandra