PRE HOSPITAL
- Transport pill/pill bottles to ED
- Calcium for bradycardic/unstable patient with confirmed CCB overdose
INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY
- ABCs:
- Airway protection, as indicated
- Supplemental oxygen, as needed
- 0.9% NS IV access
- Hemodynamic monitoring
ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
Goals
- HR >60 beats/min
- Systolic BP >90 mm Hg
- Adequate urine output
- Improving level of consciousness
GI-Decontamination
- Syrup of ipecac: Contraindicated in the pre-hospital and ED setting
- Activated charcoal:
- May be helpful, especially in the presence of coingestants
Calcium
- Usually only transiently effective
- Calcium gluconate (10%):
- Contains 0.45 mEq Ca
2+
/mL
- Does not cause tissue necrosis as calcium chloride does
- Calcium gluconate: Preferred agent in an acidemic patient
- Calcium chloride (10%):
- Contains 1.36 mEq Ca
2+
/mL (3 times more calcium than calcium gluconate)
- Can cause tissue necrosis and sloughing with extravasation
- Very irritating to veins
- Follow serum calcium levels if repeated doses of calcium administered.
- Contraindicated in known digoxin toxicity because calcium may cause serious adverse effects in this setting
Bradycardia/Hypotension
- IV fluids:
- Administer cautiously in the hypotensive patient.
- Swan-Ganz catheter or central venous pressure (CVP) monitoring to help follow volume status
- Atropine usually ineffective
- High-dose insulin (HDI):
- CCBs cause myocardial insulin resistance and inhibit insulin release from pancreatic islet cells
- Results in inefficient fatty acid metabolism
- HDI promotes more efficient myocardial carbohydrate metabolism and has been shown to improve hemodynamic function
- Vasopressor agents:
- No clear evidence that 1 agent is more effective than another
- Institute invasive monitoring to help guide treatment.
- Dopamine:
- β
1
-Receptor agonist at low doses, which causes a positive inotropic effect on the myocardium
- α-Receptor agonist at higher doses, which leads to vasoconstriction
- Epinephrine:
- Potent α- and β-receptor agonist
- Amrinone:
- Selective phosphodiesterase inhibitor
- Indirectly increases cAMP leading to increased inotropy
- Electrical pacing: When other treatment options have failed
- Potential future therapies:
- Hypertonic sodium bicarbonate
- IV fat emulsion (20% intralipid)
MEDICATION
- Amrinone: Loading dose 0.75 mg/kg; maintenance drip 2–20 μg/kg/min; titrate for effect
- Atropine: 0.5 mg (peds: 0.02 mg/kg) IV; repeat 0.5–1 mg IV (peds: 0.04 mg/kg)
- Calcium chloride: 5–10 mL of 10% solution slow IVP (peds: 0.2–0.25 mL/kg; repeat in 10 min if necessary) followed by infusion 20–50 mg/kg/h
- Calcium gluconate: 10–20 mL of 10% solution slow IVP (peds: 1 mL/kg; may repeat in 10 min if necessary)
- Dextrose: 50 mL of 50% solution (peds: 0.25 g/kg of 25% solution)
- Dopamine: 2–20 μg/kg/min; titrate to effect
- Epinephrine: 1–2 μg/min (peds: 0.01 mg/kg or 0.1 mL/kg 1:10,000); titrate to effect
- Norepinephrine: Start 2–4 μg/min IV; titrate up to 1–2 μg/kg/min IV
- Potassium: 40 mEq PO or IV
High-dose Insulin Treatment Protocol
- Should be considered if response to fluid resuscitation is inadequate
- Insulin (regular insulin): 1 IU/kg bolus IV followed by 0.5–1 IU/kg/h titrated up to clinical response
- Administer dextrose if blood glucose <200 mg/dL
- Administer potassium if serum potassium <2.5 mEq/L
- Monitor serum glucose and potassium concentrations every 30 min for the 1st 4 hr
- Approximate 24-hr insulin requirement: 1,500 U of regular insulin for adult patient
First Line
- IV fluids
- Calcium
- HDI
- Vasopressor agents
Second Line
FOLLOW-UP
DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
- Admit symptomatic patients to a monitored bed for hemodynamic monitoring.
- Admit all patients who ingested sustained-release CCBs for 24-hr observation and monitoring owing to the potential delay in symptoms.
Discharge Criteria
Discharge asymptomatic patients 8 hr after ingestion of immediate-release preparation.
FOLLOW-UP RECOMMENDATIONS
- Psychiatric evaluation for all suicidal patients
- Poison prevention guidance for parents of pediatric accidental ingestion
PEARLS AND PITFALLS
- Consider CCB toxicity in patients presenting hypotensive and bradycardic.
- Consider suicidal gesture in patients presenting with CCB toxicity.
- Consider HDI with dextrose and potassium if fluid resuscitation not rapidly effective.
ADDITIONAL READING
- Greene SL, Gawarammana I, Wood DM, et al. Relative safety of hyperinsulinaemia/euglycaemia therapy in the management of calcium channel blocker overdose: A prospective observational study.
Intensive Care Med
. 2007;33:2019–2024.
- Levine M, Boyer EW, Pozner CN, et al. Assessment of hyperglycemia after calcium channel blocker overdoses involving diltiazem or verapamil.
Crit Care Med
. 2007;35:2071–2075.
- Shepherd G. Treatment of poisoning caused by beta-adrenergic and calcium-channel blockers.
Am J Health Syst Pharm
. 2006;63:1828–1835.
- Shepherd G, Klein-Schwartz W. High-dose insulin therapy for calcium-channel blocker overdose.
Ann Pharmacother
. 2005;39:923–930.
See Also (Topic, Algorithm, Electronic Media Element)
β-Blocker, Poisoning
CODES
ICD9
972.9 Poisoning by other and unspecified agents primarily affecting the cardiovascular system
ICD10
- T46.1X1A Poisoning by calcium-channel blockers, accidental, init
- T46.1X2A Poisoning by calcium-channel blockers, self-harm, init
- T46.1X4A Poisoning by calcium-channel blockers, undetermined, init
CANDIDIASIS, ORAL
Derrick D. Fenchel
•
Deepi G. Goyal
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
- Infection of oral mucosa with any species of Candida
- Up to 80% of isolates are
Candida albicans
(most common),
Candida glabrata, and Candida tropicalis
.
- Candida normally present as oral flora in 60% of the healthy population.
- Variations include:
- Pseudomembranous (thrush)
- Chronic and acute atrophic candidiasis
- Angular cheilitis
- Hyperplastic candidiasis
- More common in neonates, elderly, and immunosuppressed individuals
- Usually benign course in healthy patients
- In immunocompromised patients, more likely to be recurrent and a non-
albicans
species
- May represent an early manifestation of AIDS in HIV-infected patients
- Typically localized
- Risk factors for systemic infection:
- AIDS
- Diabetes
- Hospitalization
- Immunosuppressive therapy
- Malignancy
- Neutropenia
- Organ transplantation
- Prematurity
ETIOLOGY
- Usually overgrowth of
C. albicans
from alterations in intraoral environment
- May be medication induced—commonly antimicrobials, inhaled or systemic steroids, chemotherapy, immunosuppressive agents
- Immunocompromised patients
- Alterations or impairment of salivary flow:
- Anticholinergic or psychotropic medications
- Sjögren disease
- Head or neck radiation
- Presence of dentures or other orthodontics:
- Occurs in up to 50–65% of denture wearers
- Common etiology for chronic atrophic candidiasis
- Interruption of epithelial barrier (cheek biting)
- Endocrinopathies (diabetes, hypothyroidism)
Pediatric Considerations
- Acute pseudomembranous candidiasis (thrush) is common in infancy likely because of immaturity of their immune system and lack of mature oral flora
- Initial presentation may be feeding difficulty secondary to dysphagia
- May have concurrent Candida diaper rash
- Consider maternal treatment if breastfeeding:
- Maternal breast colonization may be cause for persistent thrush. Query maternal nipple pain, burning, itching, or cracked skin