TREATMENT
PRE HOSPITAL
- Search for clues at scene:
- Pills/pill bottles
- Drug paraphernalia
- Witnesses
- Transport all drugs and pill bottles for identification.
- Restrain uncooperative patients for patient and health care giver protection.
- Consider comorbid conditions:
- Trauma
- Medical illness
- Environmental exposure
- Pre-hospital administration of activated charcoal may optimize decontamination if prolonged transport time.
INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY
- ABCs:
- Endotracheal intubation as needed for airway protection, oxygenation, ventilation, and orogastric lavage
- Supplemental oxygen for hypoxia
- Pulse oximetry
- Cardiac monitor
- IV access
- Hypotension:
- Administer 0.9% normal saline IV fluid bolus.
- Trendelenburg
- Vasopressors for persistent hypotension
- Bradycardia:
- If altered mental status, administer coma cocktail: Thiamine, D50W (or Accu-Chek), naloxone
ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
- Decontamination:
- See Poisoning, Gastric Decontamination.
- Prevents systemic absorption of ingested toxin
- Orogastric lavage:
- Consider in potentially lethal ingestions without known antidote within 1 hr of ingestion.
- Protected airway
essential
prior to lavage
- Activated charcoal:
- Most effective within a few hours of most toxic ingestions
- Contraindicated if caustic ingestion, unprotected airway, or bowel obstruction
- Drugs not effectively bound to charcoal: Metals (borates, bromide, iron, lithium), alcohols, potassium
- Whole-bowel irrigation:
- Polyethylene glycol (Colyte, GoLytely) evacuates bowel without causing electrolyte disturbances.
- Consider in toxins not well adsorbed by charcoal (e.g., iron and lithium), body packers/stuffers, sustained-release ingestions.
- Contraindicated if bowel obstruction, perforation, or hypotension
- Enhanced elimination:
- Enhances removal of systemically absorbed toxin
- Multiple-dose activated charcoal:
- Theophylline
- Carbamazepine
- Phenobarbital
- Urinary alkalinization:
- Hemodialysis/hemoperfusion:
- Lithium
- Salicylates
- Theophylline
- Toxic alcohols
- Valproate
- Seizures
- Treat initially with diazepam or lorazepam.
- For persistent seizures, consider phenobarbital.
- Phenytoin
not
indicated in toxicologic seizures:
- Indicated only if seizures secondary to idiopathic epilepsy, post-traumatic, or status epilepticus
- Antidotes:
- Acetaminophen:
N
-acetylcysteine
- Anticholinergic: Physostigmine
- Benzodiazepines: Flumazenil
- β-blockers: Glucagon
- Calcium-channel blockers: Calcium chloride/gluconate, insulin
- Carbon monoxide: Oxygen, hyperbaric oxygen
- Coumadin: Vitamin K
1
- Cyanide: Cyanide antidote kit, hydroxocobalamin
- Digoxin: Digibind
- Ethylene glycol: Ethanol, 4-methylpyrazole
- Iron: Deferoxamine
- Isoniazid: Pyridoxine (vitamin B
6
)
- Methanol: Ethanol, 4-methylpyrazole
- Methemoglobinemia: Methylene blue
- Opiates: Naloxone
- Organophosphates: Atropine, pralidoxime
- Tricyclic antidepressants: NaHCO
3
MEDICATION
- Activated charcoal slurry: 1–2 g/kg PO
- Dextrose: D50W 1 amp: 50 mL or 25 g (peds: D25W 2–4 mL/kg) IV
- Diazepam: 5–10 mg (peds: 0.2–0.5 mg/kg) IV every 10–15 min
- Lorazepam: 2–6 mg (peds: 0.05–0.1 mg/kg) IV every 10–15 min
- Naloxone (Narcan): 0.4–2 mg (peds: 0.1 mg/kg) IV or IM initial dose
- Thiamine (vitamin B
1
): 100 mg (peds: 50 mg) IV or IM
FOLLOW-UP
DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
- Altered mental status
- Cardiopulmonary instability
- Suicidal
- Lab abnormalities
- Potential for decompensation from delayed acting substance
Discharge Criteria
- Psychiatrically clear
- Detoxified
- Hemodynamically stable
Issues for Referral
- Patients with unintentional (accidental) poisoning require poison prevention counseling.
- Patients with intentional (e.g., suicide) poisoning require psychiatric evaluation.
- Consider substance abuse referral for patients.
Pregnancy Considerations
In general, treating the mother is also the best treatment strategy for the fetus.
FOLLOW-UP RECOMMENDATIONS
- Consider substance abuse referral for patients with recreational drug abuse.
- Patients with unintentional (accidental) poisoning require poison prevention counseling.
- Patients with intentional (e.g., suicide) poisoning require psychiatric evaluation.
PEARLS AND PITFALLS
- Do not forget to consider nontoxicologic etiologies for altered mental status.
- Do not rely on the urine drug screen to make a diagnosis: It only provides screening tests for a limited number of drugs.
- Call a toxicologist or a poison center for help: 800-222-1222.
ADDITIONAL READING
- Erickson TB, Thompson TM, Lu JJ. The approach to the patient with an unknown overdose.
Emerg Med Clin North Am
. 2007;25(2):249–281.
- Levine M, Brooks DE, Truitt CA, et al. Toxicology in the ICU: Part 1: General overview and approach to treatment.
Chest
. 2011;140(3):795–806.
- Mycyk MB. Poisoning and drug overdose. In: Longo D, Fauci A, Kasper D, et al., eds.
Harrison’s Principles of Internal Medicine.
18th ed. New York, NY: McGraw Hill; 2012:e50.1–e50.16.
- Wills B, Erickson T. Drug- and toxin-associated seizures.
Med Clin North Am
. 2005;89:1297–1321.
See Also (Topic, Algorithm, Electronic Media Element)
- Poisoning, Antidotes
- Poisoning, Gastric Decontamination
- Poisoning, Toxidromes
CODES
ICD9
- 971.1 Poisoning by parasympatholytics (anticholinergics and antimuscarinics) and spasmolytics
- 977.9 Poisoning by unspecified drug or medicinal substance
- 977.9 Poisoning by unspecified drug or medicinal substance
ICD10
- T44.3X1A Poisoning by oth parasympath and spasmolytics, acc, init
- T65.91XA Toxic effect of unspecified substance, accidental (unintentional), initial encounter
- T65.91XA Toxic effect of unspecified substance, accidental (unintentional), initial encounter
POISONING, ANTIDOTES
Suzan S. Mazor
TREATMENT
N-ACETYLCYSTEINE (NAC)
- Indications: Acetaminophen overdose
- Warnings:
- Unpleasant odor, nausea, vomiting
- Most effective if given in 1st 8 hr postingestion
- Dose:
- PO: 140 mg/kg, then 70 mg/kg q4h for 17 doses
- IV (consult poison center): 150 mg/kg in 200 mL D
5
W over 60 min, then 50 mg/kg in 500 mL D
5
W over 4 hr, then 100 mg/kg in 1,000 mL D
5
W over 16 hr