ICD10
- M84.48XA Pathological fracture, other site, init encntr for fracture
- S32.10XA Unsp fracture of sacrum, init encntr for closed fracture
- S32.14XA Type 1 fracture of sacrum, init encntr for closed fracture
SALICYLATE POISONING
Michele Zell-Kanter
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
- Respiratory alkalosis and metabolic acidosis:
- Secondary to inhibition of Krebs cycle and uncoupling of oxidative phosphorylation
- Dehydration, hyponatremia or hypernatremia, hypokalemia, hypocalcemia:
- Owing to increased sweating, vomiting, tachypnea
- Noncardiogenic pulmonary edema:
- Because of toxic effect of salicylate on pulmonary endothelium resulting in extravasation of fluids
- Salicylate pharmacokinetics change from first order to zero order in overdose setting; i.e., a small dosage increment results in a large increase in salicylate concentration.
Geriatric Considerations
- Greater morbidity
- Respiratory distress/altered mental status indicative of severe toxicity
- Diagnosis of salicylate intoxication delayed because underlying disease states mask signs and symptoms; e.g., CHF
Pediatric Considerations
- Children exhibit faster onset and more severe signs and symptoms than adults:
- Results from salicylate being distributed more quickly into target organs such as brain, kidney, and liver
- Respiratory alkalosis (hallmark of salicylate poisoning in adults) may not occur in children.
- Metabolic acidosis occurs more quickly in children than in adults.
- Hypoglycemia more common than hyperglycemia
- Ingestion of more than “a taste” of oil of wintergreen (98% methyl salicylate) by children <6 yr or >4 mL of oil of wintergreen by patients >6 yr warrants ED assessment.
ETIOLOGY
Sources of salicylate:
- Aspirin:
- Ingestion of >150 mg/kg can cause serious toxicity
- Oil of wintergreen:
- Any exposure should be considered dangerous.
- Bismuth subsalicylate
- Salicylsalicylic acid (salsalate)
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
- GI:
- Nausea
- Vomiting
- Epigastric pain
- Hematemesis
- Pulmonary:
- Tachypnea
- Noncardiogenic pulmonary edema
- CNS:
- Tinnitus
- Deafness
- Delirium
- Seizures
- Coma
History
- Ask if taking aspirin or aspirin products:
- Many patients do not list aspirin among their regular medications, may not consider aspirin a medication.
- Patients may not know the difference between aspirin, acetaminophen, and the OTC NSAIDs
ESSENTIAL WORKUP
- Salicylate level:
- At presentation and then q2h until level begins to decline
- Verify that units are correct, generally mg/dL.
- Watch for recurrence of signs of salicylate toxicity and increasing levels even after levels have declined due to intestinal absorption of enteric-coated products and salsalate
Guidelines for Assessing Severity of Salicylate Poisoning
- Acute ingestion of:
- <150 mg/kg or <6.5 g of aspirin equivalent—considered nontoxic
- 150–300 mg/kg—mild to moderately toxic
- >300 mg/kg—potentially lethal
- In the chronic overdose setting:
- Manage patient on clinical findings and not solely on levels
- Clinical findings are better indication of severity than plasma salicylate levels
- No valid nomogram exists for salicylate level interpretation
- Salicylate levels needed to achieve anti-inflammatory effect (20–25 mg/dL) approach toxic levels
- Enteric-coated aspirin absorbed in intestine; peak level delayed
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab
- Arterial blood gas (ABG):
- Respiratory alkalosis
- Metabolic acidosis
- CBC
- Electrolytes, BUN/creatinine, glucose:
- Anion-gap metabolic acidosis
- Hypokalemia
- Baseline renal function
- Urinalysis:
- PT/PTT with significant ingestions
- Ferric chloride test:
- Purple if salicylate present
- Positive 30 min postingestion
- In the presence of salicylate, Phenistix turn brown-purple; may detect concentrations as low as 20 mg/dL
Imaging
- Abdominal flat-plate radiograph for concretions
- Chest radiograph for pulmonary edema
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
- Acute salicylate poisoning:
- Consider with change in mental status, unexplained noncardiogenic pulmonary edema, mixed acid–base disorder.
- Methanol
- Ethylene glycol
- Conditions causing noncardiogenic pulmonary edema
- Chronic salicylate poisoning:
- Impending myocardial infarction
- Alcohol withdrawal
- Organic psychoses
- Sepsis
- Dementia
TREATMENT
PRE HOSPITAL
In suspected overdose settings, medication bottles must be brought in for review
INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY
- Management of airway, breathing, and circulation (ABCs)
- Naloxone, thiamine, glucose (or Accu-Chek) for altered mental status
- IV rehydration with 0.9% normal saline (NS) for hypotension
ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
- Morbidity from chronic salicylate poisoning may be greater than from acute poisoning.
- Aggressively manage all salicylate intoxication.
Gastric Decontamination
- Administer activated charcoal in alert patients.
- Whole-bowel irrigation of theoretical benefit:
- For concretions visible on abdominal radiograph
- For ingestion of sustained-release preparation
- If salicylate levels continue to increase despite appropriate management
- Do not use in patients who may develop altered mental status
Enhanced Elimination
- Alkalinization:
- Enhances elimination of ionized salicylate
- Indications:
- Acidosis
- Presence of symptoms
- Elevated salicylate levels
- 1 or 2 ampules of sodium bicarbonate followed by
IV D
5
W 1L with 3 ampules of sodium
bicarbonate:
- Goal: Urine pH of 7.5–8 at the rate of 3–6 mL/kg/h
- Add 20–40 mEq KCl per liter to avoid hypokalemia
- Avoid fluid overload with CHF or CAD
- Closely monitor serum potassium
- Indications for hemodialysis include:
- CHF
- Noncardiogenic pulmonary edema
- CNS depression
- Seizures
- Unstable vital signs
- Severe acid–base disorder
- Hepatic compromise
- Coagulopathy
- Underlying disease state compromising elimination of salicylate
- Absolute salicylate level should not be used as sole criterion for deciding to dialyze without considering patient’s clinical status unless level is >80–100 mg/dL in acute ingestion.
- Threshold to dialyze is lower in patients with chronic overdose.
MEDICATION
- Activated charcoal slurry: 1–2 g/kg up to 90 g PO
- Dextrose: D
50
W 1 amp (50 mL or 25 g) (peds: D
25
W 2–4 mL/kg) IV
- Naloxone (Narcan): 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
- Monitor patients with salicylate levels >25 mg/dL until level drops <25 mg/dL and symptoms abate.
- Salicylate levels increasing after having trended downward to nontoxic levels:
- In patients who ingest sustained-release aspirin, enteric-coated aspirin, and any aspirin product with delayed absorption
- ICU admission for altered mental status, metabolic acidosis, pulmonary edema
Discharge Criteria
Repetitive salicylate levels <25 mg/dL and resolution of symptoms
FOLLOW-UP RECOMMENDATIONS
- Psychiatric referral for intentional ingestions
- Close primary care follow-up for chronic ingestions