640 likes | 704 Vues
Learn about the general management of poisoning and overdose cases, including key statistics, common substances involved, indicators, history taking, scene survey, and specific interventions such as Ipecac, lavage, and activated charcoal. Understand the importance of support ABC's, securing airways, and monitoring ECG in managing toxic exposures effectively. Enhance your knowledge on preventing poison absorption, treating ingestions, and handling inhaled or absorbed toxins.
E N D
Poisoning/Overdose General Management Poisoning is Exposure to substance that is toxic in anyamount
Overdose Exposure to substance in excessamount resulting in toxic effects
1998 TESS* Data • 2,241,082 reported human exposures • 97.9 % at home • Peak volume 4pm-10pm • 91% of calls 8pm-midnight *The Toxic Exposure Surveillance System (US based)
Exposures by Age • < 6 years old 52.7% • < 3 years old 39.6% Fatalities • 775 fatalities • 0.03% of total exposures • ages 20 - 49 years = 56% • >6 years = 2.1%
Number of Substances • 92.8% of all cases--one substance • 44.7% of fatal cases-->2 substances
Management Location • Managed on site 75.2% • Treated, released at ER only 12.3% • Admitted to critical care 2.7% • Refused referral * 2.0%
Therapy • No therapy 11.9% • Observation only 12.7% • Decontamination only 59.6% • Activated charcoal 6.8% • Ipecac 1.2%
Most Common Substances • Cleaning substances 10.2% • Analgesics 9.6% • Cosmetics 9.4% • Plants 5.5% • Foreign bodies 4.6% • Cough, cold 4.5% • Bites, stings 4.1% • Insecticides, pesticides, rodenticides 3.9% • Sedative, hypnotics, antipsychotics 3.2% • Antidepressants 3.0% • Hydrocarbons 3.0% • Alcohols 2.5%
Largest Number of Deaths • Analgesics 264 • Antidepressants 152 • Stimulants, street drugs 118 • Cardiovascular medication 118 • Sedatives, hypnotics 89 • Alcohols 56
Indicators • Sudden onset of CNS signs: • Seizures • Coma • Decreased LOC • Bizarre behavior • Sudden onset of: • Abdominal pain • Nausea • Vomiting
Indicators cont • Sudden onset of unexplained illness • Bizarre, incomplete, evasive history • Trauma (>50% of adult trauma EtOH, drug-related) • Pediatric patient with arrhythmias
History • What? • How much? • How long? • Multiple substances? • Treatment attempted? How? Whose advice? • Psychiatric history? • History of suicide?
Scene Survey • Check out scene for : • 1 • 2 • 3 • 4 • Where do you look for clues?
General Management • SupportABC’s • Secure airway, secure with advanced airway if needed • Ensure adequate oxygenation, ventilation • Maintain adequate circulation • Monitor ECG • Obtain vascular access • Manage hypotension initially with volume • Use vasopressors cautiously
General Management • Keep patient calm • Maintain normal body temperature • Evaluate nature/toxicity of poison • Check container, package insert, poison center information • Treat the patient, not the poison
General Management • Rule out (differential diagnosis) • Trauma • Neurological disease • Metabolic disease • Base general management on route of poison entry
Ingestion Slow movement from injection site throughout body Poison Entry • Prevent absorption from GI tract • Inhalation • Remove from exposure; Support oxygenation, ventilation • Absorption • Remove from skin surface • Injection
Ingested Poisons Objective Remove from GI tract before absorption occurs
Ipecac • RARELY used anymore • If used, has to have been initiated within few minutes after ingestion • Vomiting in 20-30 minutes • Only removes about 32% of contaminate • Many contraindications
Ipecac • Dose • 15 cc if 12 months to 12 years old • 30 cc if >12 years old • Follow with 2-3 glasses of water • Keep patient ambulatory if possible
Ipecac • If no vomiting after 20 minutes, repeat • When emesis occurs, keep head down • Collect, save vomitus for analysis
Ipecac • Contraindications • Comatose or no gag reflex • Seizing or has seized • Caustic (acid or alkali) ingestion • Low viscosity hydrocarbon ingestion • Late term pregnancy
Ipecac • Contraindications • Severe hypertension, cardiovascular insufficiency, possible AMI • Ingestion of: • Strychnine • Phenothiazines (Thorazine, Stellazine, Compazine) • Tricyclic antidepressants • Iodides • Silver Nitrate
Lavage • Commonly used in ED’s • Removes about 31% of substance • Helps get activated charcoal in patient, especially if patient is unconscious • Not helpful for sustained release tablets • Will not remove large tablets
Activated Charcoal • Adsorbs compounds, prevents movement from GI tract • Very effective at adsorbing substances • Binds about 62% of toxin • Dose • 5 - 10X estimated weight of ingested chemical
Activated Charcoal • Inactivates Ipecac • Do not give until vomiting stops • Do not give with • Cyanide • Methanol • Tylenol (+) • Containers must be kept airtight • Can be given PO via slurry or by NG
Inhaled Poisons Objective: Move to fresh air; optimize ventilation and protect personnel from exposure
Absorbed Poisons Objective: Remove poison from skin Liquid: Wash with copious amounts of water Powder: Brush off as much as possible, then wash with copious amounts of water Protect personnel from exposure
Dilute / Irrigate / Wash • Use soap, shampoo for hydrocarbons • No need for chemical neutralization - heat produced by reaction could be harmful
Eye Irrigation • Wash for 15 minutes • Use only water or balanced salt solutions • Remove contact lenses • Wash from medial to lateral
Acids • Examples • Toilet bowl cleaner • Rust remover • Phenol (carbolic acid) • Hydrochloric acid • Severe burning of stomach • Absorption, systemic acidemia
Acids • Loss of airway = most immediate threat • Secure airway against edema • IV with RL, NS for volume loss • Emesis, gastric lavage contraindicated • Dilution with water, milk NOT recommended
Alkalis • Examples • Drain cleaner • Washing soda • Ammonia • Lye (sodium hydroxide) • Bleach (sodium hypochlorite) • Severe burning of esophagus, stricture formation
Alkalis • Loss of airway = most immediate threat • Secure airway against edema • IV with LR, NS for volume loss • Emesis, gastric lavage contraindicated • Dilution with water, milk NOT recommended
Hydrocarbons • Examples • Kerosene • Gasoline • Lighter fluid • Turpentine • Furniture polish
Hydrocarbons • Signs/Symptoms • Choking, coughing, gagging • Vomiting, diarrhea, severe abdominal pain • Chemical pneumonitis, pulmonary edema If the patient is coughing, aspiration has occurred
Methanol methyl alcohol wood alcohol wood naphtha
Methanol • Sources • Industry • Household solvents • Paint remover • Fuel, gasoline additives • Canned heat • Windshield washer antifreeze
Methanol • Toxic dose • Fatal oral: 30-240ml • Minimum: 100 mg/kg • Example • Windshield washer fluid 10% Methanol • 10 kg child needs only 10 cc to be toxic
Methanol • Mechanism of toxicity • Methanol slowly metabolized to formaldehyde • Formaldheyde rapidly metabolized to formic acid • Acidosis • Ocular toxicity
Methanol H H C Formaldehyde H O H O H Aldehydedehydrogenase H O C Formic Acid H O O C H H C _ O H + Methanol Metabolism Alcohol dehydrogenase
But first… • A little review of biochemistry and biophysics
Staying alive requires energy... • The natural tendency of the universe is for things to become more disorderly. • This trend toward disorder is called entropy. • Complex systems (including us) don’t tend to last long, unless… • They have a constant supply of energy to combat entropy.
Organisms capture and store the energy they need in the form of... Adenosine Triphosphate (ATP) • The “currency” cells use to pay off the energy debt built up fighting entropy. • Formed by capturing energy released as the cell breaks down large molecules through glycolysis and the Krebs Cycle.
Putting It All Together • Cells have to have energy to stay alive. • Cells get energy by breaking down glucose in two phases: glycolysis and the Krebs Cycle. • Glycolysis yields 2 ATP and pyruvate. • Pyruvate is changed to acetate (acetyl-CoA) and sent to the Krebs Cycle. • The Krebs Cycle strips hydrogen and electrons off acetate and feeds them into the electron transport chain. • Movement of electrons down the transport chain releases energy which is trapped as ATP. • At the end of the chain, the electrons combine with hydrogen and oxygen to form water. • CN messes with this !
Cyanide • Chemical, plastic industries • Metallurgy, jewelry making • Blast furnace gases • Fumigants, pesticides • Present in various plants • apples, pears, apricots, peaches, bitter almonds • Remember there is CN gas released by BURNT plastics (e.g fire!!)
Cyanide Antidote Kit • Amyl nitrite, sodium nitrite • Only be used in serious cyanide poisonings • Can induce life-threatening tissue hypoxia secondary to methemoglobinemia • Sodium thiosulfate • Can be used by itself • Is relatively benign