1 / 52

ACUTE POISONING - MANAGEMENT

ACUTE POISONING - MANAGEMENT. Ayman M. Kamaly, MD Professor of Anesthesiology Ain Shams University kamaly3@hotmail.com. INTRODUCTION. Acute poisoning is a common medical emergency in any country. The exact incidence of this problem in our country remains uncertain.

hova
Télécharger la présentation

ACUTE POISONING - MANAGEMENT

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. ACUTE POISONING -MANAGEMENT Ayman M. Kamaly, MD Professor of Anesthesiology Ain Shams University kamaly3@hotmail.com

  2. INTRODUCTION • Acute poisoning is a common medical emergency in any country. • The exact incidence of this problem in our country remains uncertain.

  3. For effective management of an acutely poisoned victim, 5 steps are required: • Resuscitation and initial stabilization • Diagnosis of type of poison • Nonspecific therapy • Specific therapy • Supportive care

  4. Resuscitation and Initial Stabilization Initial management: ABCDs • Airway • Breathing • Circulation

  5. Lessons from History... • A young princess ate part of an apple given to her by a wicked witch

  6. She was found comatose and unresponsive, as if in a deep sleep, • Airway positioning and mouth to mouth ventilation were performed, • and she was fully recovered.

  7. Lessons: • Best Antidote = Good Supportive Care (Love’s first kiss) • Airway issues is a still the major cause of morbidity in toxicology as in other aspects of emergency.

  8. Circulation = Plumbing • Pump working? • Inotrope • Enough volume (is it primed)? • Hypovolemia? • IV fluid challenge • Adequate resistance (no leaks)? • Inadequate vascular resistance? • Norepinephrine, phenylephrine

  9. Initial management: ABCDs Treat problems as you find them!! • Airway, • Breathing, • Circulation, • Drugs, • Decontamination, • Detoxication, • Disability – GCS/AVPU and Pupils, • DON’T EVER FORGET GLUCOSE.

  10. Don’t forget GLUCOSE “A stroke is never a stroke until it’s had 50 of D50” • Empiric administration of dextrose??! • Check the blood sugar using a reliable bedside test • Administer dextrose ONLY if the RBS is <80 mg/dl.

  11. Diagnosis of Type of Toxin • What? • When? • How much? (mg/kg) • What else? • Why? A) History Be a Detective

  12. Collateral history • Paramedics • Family / friends • Notes • Look in pockets – carefully!!! Look for Clues

  13. B) Examination

  14. Investigations • All Patients • Glucose • Paracetamol & Salicylate • As indicated • LFT • RFT, Lytes • Co-ag / INR • CK • ABG / VBG • Urine toxicology screen

  15. Investigations • Urine toxicology screen • Pinkish urine --->>> phenothiazine, • Chocolate colored --->>> met-hemoglobinaemia, • Oxalate crystals --->>> ethylene glycol, • Ketonuria (without metab. changes) --->>> Salicylate

  16. Investigations • Abdominal X-Ray (Radiopaque Toxins) • Chloral hydrate, iodides, • Heavy metals, iron, • Sustained release pills, • Solvents (Chloroform, CCL4)

  17. Non-Specific Therapy • Aim: • Reduce absorption of poison from the gut, • Increase excretion of absorbed poison.

  18. A.Reducing absorption 1) Emesis • Syrup of Ipecac • Amount of recovered toxin is highly variable • Effective within ONEhour • Contraindicated: • Comatose/Convulsing • Ingested corrosive or hydrocarbon*

  19. 2) Gastric Lavage • Lt Lat Position + head down • to prevent aspiration & ↓ pushing lavage into duodenum. • If unconscious  ETT • Effective within 1-2hours • Contraindicated: • Strong corrosive or • Volatile hydrocarbons

  20. 3) Activated Charcoal • Small particle size & enormous surface area, • Bind most drugs & toxins, • Dose: 1 g/kg • Exceptions: • Iron, Lithium, Metals, • Methanol, Ethanol, Hydrocarbons, • DDT

  21. Activated Charcoal (cont.) • More effective than Ipecac, Gastric Lavage • First choice for most Over Doses

  22. 4) Whole Bowel Irrigation • Isotonic soln. of Polyethylene glycol (2 L/hr) • Not absorbed from intestine (mechanical flush) • Good for: • Iron, Lithium, • Sustained-release pills, • Foreign bodies, • Drug “packets”

  23. B.Increasing Excretion • Forced AlkalineDiuresis • Principle:Renal tubular epith is impermeable to ionized (+) molecules. If the urinary pH is changed so as to produce more of ionized form, it is trapped in the tubular fluid & is excreted in the urine. • Useful in: • Salicylates, • Phenobarbital, • Lithium

  24. Forced AlkalineDiuresis (Cont.) • Method: • D5% - ½ NS + bicarbonate 20-35 mEq/L to produce a urine output of 3-6 ml/kg/hr & a urine pH 7.5-8.5. • Diuretics are often needed to maintain high urine flows. • KCl is added to prevent ↓K+, • Contraindications: • Shock, • Hypotension, CHF, • Renal failure

  25. 2) Multiple-Doses Activated Charcoal • 1 g/kg/1-4 hrs • To maintain intestinal toxin conc. near-zero (Gastrointestinal Dialysis). • Indicated in toxins with : • Long ½ life, • Enterohepatic circulation ( Digoxin, Phenobarbitals, Theophylline), • Sustained-release preparations, • Massive toxin dose to be effectively adsorbed by single charcoal dose

  26. 3) Dialysis (Peritoneal/Hemo) • For H2O soluble & Low MW compounds. • Useful in: • Ethanol, Methanol, • Salicylates, • Theophylline, • Ethylene glycol, • Phenobarbital • Lithium

  27. Specific Therapy

  28. Supportive Therapy • Try to maintain functions of CNS, CVS, Renal, … • Care for coma, seizures, hypotension, arrhythmias, hypoxia, …

  29. Exposure to toxins could be through routes other than ingestion (Cutaneous, Ocular) • Antidotes are NOT available for every toxin

  30. However; when Antidote is Present the effect is Dramatic

  31. Legal Aspects • The 1st sample of gastric lavage should be collected in “clean” container (Contamination !!). • Container should be sealed using a glue paper before sending for toxicological screening.

  32. After sealing Blood & Urine collection tubes and bottles, pt’s information should be written on the labels & affixed @ the juncture between the cap & the bottle. • POLICE should be informed !!

  33. Clinical Scenarios

  34. Paracetamol • Very common: 40% poisons admissions • Often asymptomatic • Can be lethal – 200-300 deaths/year • Check blood level at 4 hours • Two treatment lines normal and high risk

  35. Prescott Nomogram

  36. Paracetamol metabolism • Metabolised by: • Glucuronidation (60%), • Sulphation (35%) • Oxidation (10%) by Cytochrome p450 produces NAPQI (toxic  hepatocellular necrosis) • NAPQI detoxified by conjugation with glutathione.

  37. High Risk pt. • Increased oxidation pathway (enzyme induction) • Chronic alcohol use • Drugs • Reduces glutathione stores • Malnutrition • Eating disorders • Chronic liver disease

  38. N-Acetylcysteine • Most effective within 8hours • Precursor for glutathione production • Can cause anaphylactoid reactions !! • Consider starting before paracetamol result if: • Presenting > 8 hrs & > 150mg/kg taken • Other accompanying overdose.

  39. Patient 1 • 20 year old woman who takes a handful of paracetamol tablets • No drug history • No alcohol use • Fit and well • Blood level is 80mg/L after 4 hrs.

  40. No need to treat • Patient is not high risk • Level at 4 hours is below even the high risk line

  41. Patient 2 • 70 year old man • Takes 20 paracetamol 6 hours before presenting • Alcoholic • No drug history • Blood level 100mg/L

  42. Treat • High risk patient • Level above the high risk line

  43. Patient 3 • 17 year old epileptic • 25 tab Panadol 2 hours before attendance • Taking carbamazepine • Blood level at 4 hours is 120mg/L

  44. Treat • High risk patient • Level above the high risk line

  45. Patient 4 • 35 year old man who presents after taking 24 paracetamol over a period of 24 hours • No drug history • Fit and well • Blood level 20mg/L

  46. Treat • Staggered overdoses are difficult • Level is above the treat-line in context to time • Need to monitor Liver function, clotting and renal function • May need discussing with Liver Unit if abnormal

  47. 26836674 24823314 26840902

  48. Some Famous Historic Poisonings

More Related