Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult (490 page)

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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
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  • Bind to μ, κ, and δ opiate receptors in the CNS and peripheral nervous system (PNS)
  • Physical and psychological dependence occurs.
  • Peak plasma levels:
    • PO: 1–2 hr
    • Intramuscular: 0.5–1 hr
    • Intravenous or intranasal: Seconds to minutes
ETIOLOGY
  • Overuse or abuse of oral prescription analgesics for moderate to severe pain
  • Street preparations of opiate analogs may contain adulterants:
    • Cocaine
    • Clenbuterol
    • Phencyclidine
    • Strychnine
    • Dextromethorphan
    • Quinine
    • Scopolamine
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
  • CNS:
    • CNS depression
    • Coma
    • Seizures
  • GI:
    • Nausea
    • Vomiting
    • Constipation
  • Cardiovascular:
    • Hypotension
    • Bradycardia
    • Palpitations
  • Pulmonary:
    • Respiratory depression
    • Bronchospasm
    • Pulmonary edema
    • Apnea
  • Other:
    • Miosis
    • Hypothermia
  • Withdrawal:
    • HTN
    • Tachycardia
    • Tachypnea
    • Abdominal cramps
    • Diarrhea
    • Piloerection
    • Yawning
Pediatric Considerations
  • Neonatal withdrawal:
    • Infants born to addicted mothers
    • Onset: 12–72 hr after birth
    • Irritability, tremors, poor feeding, and dehydration
  • Diphenoxylate (Lomotil): Toxicity more severe in children than adults and may be fatal
ESSENTIAL WORKUP

Monitor vital signs and pulmonary status with significant exposure:

  • Pulse oximetry or arterial blood gases
  • CXR if persistent hypoxia or possible aspiration
  • Abdominal radiograph if body packing suspected
  • Perform a complete exam for occult sticky patches (e.g., fentanyl).
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab
  • Plasma opiate levels not clinically useful:
    • Treatment based on clinical presentation, not opiate level
  • Urine toxicity screen for opiates may not identify some synthetic opioids (e.g., methadone).
  • Acetaminophen level for overuse or abuse of oral prescription analgesic products
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
  • Clonidine overdose
  • Barbiturate overdose
  • Benzodiazepine overdose
  • γ-hydroxybutyrate (GHB) overdose
  • Neuroleptic overdose
  • Occult head injury
TREATMENT
PRE HOSPITAL
  • Transport all pills/pill bottles involved in overdose for identification in ED.
  • Provide respiratory support.
  • Administer naloxone.
INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY
  • Check ABCs:
    • Airway control is essential.
    • Administer supplemental oxygen.
  • Administer naloxone:
    • Reverses respiratory depression and coma in opiate overdoses
    • Intubate if naloxone does not reverse respiratory depression.
ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
  • Naloxone administration:
    • Start with low doses for opiate-habituated patients.
    • High doses (10 mg) may be required to reverse the effects of propoxyphene, methadone, and fentanyl.
    • Administer repeated doses that reversed symptoms, as needed every 20–60 min.
    • For long-acting opioids, consider an hourly infusion of 2/3 of the dose needed to reverse symptoms.
  • Decontamination:
    • Administer activated charcoal for oral ingestion.
    • Administer whole-bowel irrigation with polyethylene glycol for asymptomatic body packers.
  • Treat opiate withdrawal with clonidine or methadone.
  • Hypotension:
    • 0.9% normal saline IV fluid bolus
    • Trendelenburg test
    • Initiate dopamine for resistant hypotension.
  • Seizures:
    • Treat initially with diazepam.
    • Administer phenobarbital for persistent seizures.
MEDICATION
  • Activated charcoal: 1–2 g/kg PO
  • Clonidine: 0.1–0.3 mg PO BID for 10 days; 0.1–0.2 mg/kg/d transdermal patch
  • Diazepam: 5–10 mg IV (peds: 0.2–0.5 mg/kg IV) q10–15min
  • Dopamine: 2–20 μ/kg/min; titrate to effect.
  • Methadone: 15–40 mg/d
  • Naloxone: 0.4–2 mg (peds: 0.1 mg/kg; neonate dose same as peds except if suspect neonatal withdrawal use 0.001 mg/kg IV) IV, IM, or nebulized
  • Phenobarbital: 10–20 mg/kg IV (loading dose); monitor for respiratory depression
  • Polyethylene glycol: 2 L/h until clear rectal effluent and/or passage of packets
ALERT

Opioid patches can be abused in various ways (transdermally, orally, smoked, injected). Even used patches still contain a significant dose of drug.

FOLLOW-UP
DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
  • Symptomatic after oral overdose
  • Repeated naloxone dosing or infusion needed to reverse symptoms
  • Children <5 yr after diphenoxylate ingestion should be observed for 24 hr.
  • Opiate body packers
  • Persistent symptoms from concomitant toxin exposure (e.g., clenbuterol)
Discharge Criteria
  • Asymptomatic 6 hr after oral overdose
  • Asymptomatic 4 hr after naloxone administration
  • Complete elimination of opiate packets
FOLLOW-UP RECOMMENDATIONS
  • Substance abuse referral for patients with oral opiate abuse.
  • Patients with unintentional (accidental) poisoning require poison prevention counseling.
  • Patients with intentional (e.g., suicide) poisoning require psychiatric evaluation.
PEARLS AND PITFALLS
  • Consider occult acetaminophen poisoning in chronic oral opioid–abusing patients.
  • Buprenorphine may cause prolonged sedation in pediatric patients.
  • Semisynthetic and synthetic opioids will not provide a positive opiate hospital drug screen result.
ADDITIONAL READING
  • Bailey JE, Campagna E, Dart RC. The underrecognized toll of prescription opioid abuse on young children.
    Ann Emerg Med
    . 2009;53(4):419–424.
  • Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Vital signs: Overdoses of prescription opioid pain relievers—United States, 1999–2008.
    MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep
    . 2011;60(43):1487–1492.
  • Enteen L, Bauer J, McLean R, et al. Overdose prevention and naloxone prescription for opioid users in San Francisco.
    J Urban Health
    . 2010;87(6):931–941.
  • Hoffman RS, Kirrane BM, Marcus SM, et al. A descriptive study of an outbreak of clenbuterol-containing heroin.
    Ann Emerg Med
    . 2008;52(5):548–553.
  • Weber JM, Tataris KL, Hoffman JD, et al. Can nebulized naloxone be used safely and effectively by emergency medical services for suspected opioid overdose?
    Prehosp Emerg Care
    . 2012;16(2):289–292.
CODES
ICD9
  • 965.00 Poisoning by opium (alkaloids), unspecified
  • 965.01 Poisoning by heroin
  • 965.02 Poisoning by methadone
ICD10
  • T40.1X1A Poisoning by heroin, accidental (unintentional), init encntr
  • T40.3X1A Poisoning by methadone, accidental (unintentional), init
  • T40.601A Poisoning by unsp narcotics, accidental, init
OPPORTUNISTIC INFECTIONS
Sandra E. Sicular

Colleen M. Rivers
BASICS
DESCRIPTION

Unusual infections that occur when host suffers a decrease in resistance against normally nonpathogenic organisms

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