Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult (485 page)

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Authors: Jeffrey J. Schaider,Adam Z. Barkin,Roger M. Barkin,Philip Shayne,Richard E. Wolfe,Stephen R. Hayden,Peter Rosen

Tags: #Medical, #Emergency Medicine

BOOK: Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult
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DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
  • Acute overdose:
    • Symptom onset within 6 hr, 9 hr with aripiprazole, up to 24 hr with extended-release formulations (paliperidone)
    • Can be delayed if anticholinergic symptoms predominate
    • CNS:
      • Ranges from mild sedation to coma
      • Anticholinergic delirium possible
      • Extrapyramidal symptoms (dystonia, akathisia)
      • Seizures
    • Cardiovascular:
      • Tachycardia (anticholinergic)
      • Hypotension (antiadrenergic)
      • QT prolongation
      • Torsade de pointes (rare)
    • Respiratory:
      • Respiratory depression
      • Loss of airway reflexes
    • GI:
      • Constipation
      • Dry mouth
    • Genitourinary:
      • Urinary retention
  • Dystonic reactions:
    • Involuntary muscle spasms of face, neck, back, and limbs
    • Dramatic appearance is frightening to patient and family
    • Laryngeal dystonia is a rare form that may cause stridor and dyspnea.
  • NMS:
    • Occurs in <1% of patients, 30% mortality
    • Severe hyperthermia
    • Skeletal muscle rigidity
    • Altered mental status
    • Autonomic dysfunction
    • Electrolyte disturbance
    • Rhabdomyolysis
  • Agranulocytosis:
    • Seen with clozapine and olanzapine
    • Occurs with chronic treatment
  • Diabetes:
    • Hyperglycemia, new-onset diabetes, and DKA have all been reported with initiation of neuroleptics.
ESSENTIAL WORKUP
  • Monitor vital signs with significant ingestions.
  • Cardiac monitor
  • Pulse oximetry
  • Core body temperature for hyperthermia
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab
  • Electrolytes, BUN, creatinine, glucose, LFTs
  • CBC for clozapine overdose, WBC can be elevated in NMS
  • Creatine phosphokinase (CPK) levels if NMS suspected, agitation, or prolonged immobilization
  • Serum drug screen with drug levels for possible coingestions based on history:
    • Aspirin
    • Acetaminophen
    • Lithium
    • Valproate
    • Phenytoin
    • Phenobarbital
  • Urine toxicologic screens are rarely helpful
    • False-negatives and false-positives can be misleading
  • Quantitative levels are rarely available and not helpful in acute management
Imaging
  • ECG:
    • QT prolongation
    • QRS prolongation (rare)
  • Head CT:
    • Indicated for significant mental status change
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
  • Serotonin syndrome
  • Malignant hyperthermia (if recent anesthesia)
  • Antidepressant overdose
  • Anticholinergic crisis
  • Sympathomimetic overdose
  • Opioid overdose
  • Occult head injury
  • Endocrine disorder
  • Sepsis
  • Heat stroke
TREATMENT
PRE HOSPITAL

Bring medication bottles when transporting patient to hospital.

INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY

Airway, breathing, and circulation management (ABCs):

  • Administer supplemental oxygen.
  • Consider naloxone, thiamine, D
    50
    (or check blood glucose) for altered mental status
  • Intubate if respiratory depression
ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
  • Supportive care is the mainstay of treatment
  • Decontamination:
    • Administer single dose of activated charcoal if ingestion within 1 hr
    • Do not give charcoal to patient with unprotected airway
    • Use NG tube for charcoal only if pt is intubated
    • Consider whole bowel irrigation if large amounts of extended-release formulation ingested (paliperidone)
    • Hemodialysis unlikely to be helpful due to high degree of protein binding
    • Consider lipid emulsion therapy for cardiovascular collapse
  • Hypotension:
    • 0.9% normal saline (NS) IV fluid bolus
    • Treat resistant hypotension with norepinephrine or phenylephrine
    • Dopamine may be ineffective
  • Ventricular dysrhythmias:
    • Class IA, IB, and III antidysrhythmics can potentiate cardiotoxicity. Lidocaine can be used in refractory cases
    • Magnesium for prolonged QT
    • Cardioversion if hemodynamically unstable
    • Consider intralipid (20% lipid emulsion) for cardiovascular collapse
    • For asymptomatic QTc prolongation, replete potassium, calcium, and magnesium to normal levels
    • QRS prolongation (>120 msec) should be treated with sodium bicarbonate therapy
  • Dystonic reactions:
    • Administer diphenhydramine or benztropine mesylate.
    • Treatment should be continued for 3 days to prevent recurrence.
  • NMS:
    • Recognition and cessation of neuroleptics is critical.
    • Active cooling for hyperthermia
    • Aggressive benzodiazepines for agitation
    • Severe cases may require bromocriptine (dopamine agonist) or dantrolene (a direct-acting muscle relaxant)
    • Consider intubation and neuromuscular blockade
  • Seizures:
    • Treat initially with diazepam or lorazepam.
    • Phenobarbital for persistent seizures
    • There is no role for phenytoin in toxin-induced seizures
  • Anticholinergic delirium:
    • Benzodiazepines are 1st-line agents
    • Physostigmine can be used with caution
      • Physostigmine is contraindicated in a patient with dysrhythmias, heart block, or interval prolongation on EKG
MEDICATION
  • Activated charcoal: 1–2 g/kg PO
  • Benztropine mesylate: 1–2 mg IV or PO
  • Bromocriptine: 2.5–10 mg q8h PO
  • Dantrolene: 2–3 mg/kg/d as continuous infusion (10 mg/kg max.)
  • Diazepam: 5–10 mg IV q10–15min
  • Diphenhydramine: 25–50 mg IV (1 mg/kg)
  • Lidocaine 1–2 mg/kg followed by infusion
  • Lipid emulsion (20%) 1.5 mL/kg bolus followed by 0.25 mL/kg/min infusion for 30–60 min, may repeat bolus for persistent hemodynamic compromise
  • Lorazepam: 2–4 mg (peds: 0.03–0.05 mg/kg) IV q10–15min
  • Magnesium sulfate: 1–2 g IV over 5–15 min
  • Norepinephrine: 1–2 μg/kg/min IV titrate to BP
  • Phenobarbital: 10–20 mg/kg IV (loading dose); monitor for respiratory depression
  • Physostigmine 0.5 mg IV q3–5min
FOLLOW-UP
DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
  • Overdose with CNS sedation, agitation, dysrhythmias, or vital sign abnormalities to monitored bed or ICU
  • NMS require ICU care
  • New-onset diabetes (secondary to neuroleptic use) with severe hyperglycemia and/or ketoacidosis.
Discharge Criteria
  • Asymptomatic after 6 hr of observation
  • Longer observation required for aripiprazole and paliperidone ingestion as well as ingestion of extended release formulations
Issues for Referral
  • Patients with unintentional (accidental) poisoning require poison prevention counseling.
  • Patients with intentional (e.g., suicide) poisoning require psychiatric evaluation.
  • New-onset diabetes requires primary care/endocrine follow-up.
FOLLOW-UP RECOMMENDATIONS
  • Psychiatric referral for intentional overdoses
  • Primary care follow-up for accidental ingestions or medication side effect follow-up
PEARLS AND PITFALLS
  • Neuroleptics represent a group of drugs with diverse indications and a wide range of toxicity.
  • Most overdoses are mild, and CNS depression predominates.
  • Dystonic reactions are the most common side effect of neuroleptics. These reactions are dramatic in appearance but easily treatable.
  • NMS is a potentially fatal reaction that can be seen in acute or chronic usage of neuroleptics.
  • Newer antipsychotics can have delayed onset up to 24 hr.
  • Contact the poison control center for further guidance
ADDITIONAL READING
  • Levine M, Ruha AM. Overdose of atypical antipsychotics: Clinical presentation, mechanisms of toxicity and management.
    CNS Drugs
    . 2012;26:601–611.
  • Lipscombe LL, Lévesque L, Gruneir A, et al. Antipsychotic drugs and hyperglycemia in older patients with diabetes.
    Arch Intern Med
    . 2009;169:1282–1289.
  • Minns AB, Clark RF. Toxicology and overdose of atypical antipsychotics.
    J Emerg Med
    . 2012;43:906–913.
  • Ngo A, Ciranni M, Olson KR. Acute quetiapine overdose in adults: A 5-year retrospective case series.
    Ann Emerg Med
    . 2008;52:541–547.
  • Reulbach U, Dütsch C, Biermann T, et al. Managing an effective treatment for neuroleptic malignant syndrome.
    Crit Care
    . 2007;11:R4.
  • Wittler MA. Antipsychotics. In: Marx, ed.
    Rosen’s Emergency Medicine
    . 7th ed. St. Louis, MO: Mosby; 2009.
  • www.lipidrescue.org
    .
CODES

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