See Also (Topic, Algorithm, Electronic Media Element)
Visual Loss
The author gratefully acknowledges Vinh D. Ngo’s contribution for the previous edition of this chapter
.
CODES
ICD9
- 377.30 Optic neuritis, unspecified
- 377.31 Optic papillitis
- 377.32 Retrobulbar neuritis (acute)
ICD10
- H46.00 Optic papillitis, unspecified eye
- H46.9 Unspecified optic neuritis
- H46.10 Retrobulbar neuritis, unspecified eye
ORGANOPHOSPHATE POISONING
Vinodinee L. Dissanayake
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
- Organophosphates (pesticides and nerve agents) irreversibly bind and deactivate cholinesterases, including acetylcholinesterase
- Acetylcholine accumulates at neural synapses, causing central and peripheral cholinergic overdrive
- Predominant effects (muscarinic, nicotinic, CNS) may vary and can overlap.
- Mortality is secondary to respiratory failure:
- Weakness of respiratory muscles
- Bronchorrhea and bronchoconstriction
- Central depression of respiratory drive
Pediatric Considerations
- Symptoms are difficult to differentiate in toddlers
- Common symptoms: Miosis, salivation, and muscle weakness
- Seizure activity in 25% of pediatric cases:
ETIOLOGY
- Exposure to insecticides (organophosphorus compounds)
- Exposure to chemical nerve agents (sarin, soman, tabun, VX)
- Extremely well absorbed from lung, GI tract, skin, mucosa, eyes
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
- Classic presentation: Cholinergic toxidrome:
- DUMBELS:
- D
iarrhea/diaphoresis
- U
rination
- M
iosis/muscle fasciculations
- B
radycardia, bronchorrhea, bronchospasm
- E
mesis
- L
acrimation
- S
alivation
- May have garlic odor
- Chronic intermittent exposure, nonspecific symptoms:
- Weakness
- Fatigue
- Malaise
- Anorexia
- Mild exposure:
- CNS:
- Headache
- Dizziness
- Tremors of tongue and eyelids
- Weakness
- GI:
- Moderate exposure:
- CNS:
- Muscle fasciculation then flaccid paralysis
- Respiratory muscle weakness
- Incoordination and ataxia
- Agitation
- Tremors
- Confusion
- Visual:
- Pinpoint nonreactive pupils
- Respiratory:
- Respiratory muscle weakness
- Bronchorrhea
- Cardiovascular:
- GI:
- Nausea/vomiting
- Abdominal cramps
- Exocrine glands:
- Severe exposure:
- CNS:
- Convulsions
- Coma
- Centrally mediated respiratory depression
- Respiratory:
- Bronchoconstriction
- Wheezing
- Dyspnea
- Increased bronchial secretions
- Cardiovascular:
- Bradycardia (tachycardia may follow pulmonary edema and hypoxia)
- Heart block
- Cyanosis
- GI:
- Nausea, vomiting
- Abdominal pain
- Diarrhea, fecal incontinence
- Exocrine glands:
- Diaphoresis
- Salivation
- Lacrimation
- Bladder:
- Frequency
- Urinary incontinence
- Nicotinic manifestations
ESSENTIAL WORKUP
Inquire about possible exposure, occupation, recent insecticide at home, mislabeled, or poorly stored insecticides:
- Obtain original container if suicide attempt.
- Look for parasympathetic and CNS signs with muscle weakness or paralysis.
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab
- RBC and plasma cholinesterase levels to confirm diagnosis:
- RBC (true) cholinesterase level is best for synaptic inhibition (a send-out lab).
- Plasma (pseudo)cholinesterase level not as reliable but more timely:
- These are markers for poisoning
- Depending on the agent and the patient, these levels may vary
- Cholinesterase levels:
- Latent exposure: >50% of normal value
- Mild exposure: 20–50% of normal value
- Moderate exposure: 10–20% of normal value
- Severe exposure: <10% of normal value
- Do not wait for cholinesterase results before administering treatment.
- CBC, electrolytes, glucose, BUN, creatinine
- ABG when respiratory symptoms are present
Imaging
- CXR if respiratory difficulty is present or suspect pulmonary edema:
- Pneumonitis from hydrocarbon aspiration
- ECG:
- Dysrhythmias (atrial fibrillation, ventricular tachycardia, torsades de pointes, QT prolongation)
- Bradycardia
- Heart block
- ST–T-wave abnormalities
- CT scan of head for altered mental status when diagnosis is uncertain
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
- Mild to moderate exposure:
- Gastroenteritis
- Asthma
- Venomous arthropod bite (black widow, scorpion)
- Progressive peripheral neuropathy (Guillain–Barré syndrome)
- Carbon monoxide
- Severe exposure:
- Narcotic overdose
- Coma and miosis:
- PCP, meprobamate, phenothiazine, clonidine
- Muscarinic-containing mushrooms—cholinergic crisis without nicotinic symptoms
- Nicotine poisoning
- Metabolic and infectious:
- Ketoacidosis, sepsis, meningitis, encephalitis
- Hypoglycemia
- Reye syndrome
- Neurologic:
- Cerebrovascular accident
- Subdural or epidural hematoma
- Postictal state
TREATMENT
PRE HOSPITAL
- Decontamination is initial priority:
- Decontaminate, airway, breathing, circulation (DABC)
- Remove all clothes and store as toxic waste (double bagged)
- Protection of health care workers of utmost importance:
- Impenetrable gloves (neoprene, nitrile), gowns, eye protection
- Decontaminate skin with soap and water:
- Shower or gentle scrubbing ideal if done before entrance into the ED
- Maintain airway and oxygenate.
- IV access and place on cardiac monitor
INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY
- Decontaminate ABCs:
- Decontamination and protection of staff
- Maintain airway and oxygenate.
- For unstable airway, intubate, and ventilate.
- IV access with D
5
W 0.9% NS
- Altered mental status: Administer thiamine, glucose, and naloxone (Narcan)
ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
- Atropine:
- Blocks acetylcholine at muscarinic receptor sites.
- No effect on nicotinic receptors
- Onset of action is 1–4 min, peaks at 8 min.
- Goal of therapy/end point:
- Drying secretions of tracheobronchial tree
- Administer test dose 1–2 mg IV/IM:
- No clinical response: Double dose q5min until muscarinic findings subside
- Dose: 1–4 mg IV q5min (peds: 0.05–0.2 mg/kg)
- Common pitfalls in therapy:
- Not giving enough atropine
- Using pupillary findings (mydriasis) as end point of treatment
- Mistaking dilated pupils or tachycardia as contraindications to atropine
- Pralidoxime (2-PAM):
- Regenerates cholinesterase by reversing the phosphorylation of the enzyme.
- Synergistic with atropine—muscarinic signs/symptoms will start to resolve in 10–40 min.
- Side effects: Neuromuscular blockade with rapid infusion, respiratory arrest, HTN, nausea/vomiting, dizziness, blurred vision.
- End point is resolution of muscle weakness and fasciculations.
- Effective before enzyme aging occurs (permanent inactivation of cholinesterase)
- Onset of aging varies among products
- No restriction to its use even if 24–48 hr have passed
- Supportive care:
- Dermal decontamination: Remove clothes and flush skin with water
- Gastric lavage (early presentation of severe ingestion):
- Gastric emptying with continuous suction via a nasogastric tube.
- Handle contents with care—avoid direct contact to prevent personal exposure.
- Respiratory difficulty:
- Frequent oropharyngeal suction
- Treat bronchospasm with atropine, not bronchodilators.
- Tachycardia may result from hypoxia (pulmonary secretions and bronchospasm).
- Atropine will dry secretions and paradoxically lower the heart rate.
- Intubate and ventilate if necessary.
- Avoid succinylcholine; may have prolonged duration as it is metabolized by cholinesterase.