Management of Acute Overdose By: Peter Rempel March 27 th, 2013
Presentation Outline Introduction and Statistics General management strategy Identification of Toxidromes Management of overdose for specific medications Role of pharmacist
Introduction - Overdose Definition: The use of a substance in quantities greater than recommended. Accidental vs. Intentional misuse
Epidemiology - Overdose Approximately 2.3 million cases reported (US) 50% caused by pharmaceutics 41,592 deaths occurred in the US (2009) 76% were unintentional 91% caused by medications Prevalence higher in males during the early years (0-12y) Rates in females surpass males in older populations
Epidemiology (Continued) Most common pharmaceutics: Analgesics (Opioids) Sedative/hypnotic/antipsychotics Antidepressants Antihistamines Cardiovascular drugs Vitamins, cough and cold products Rates of unintentional overdose has been steadily increasing
General Management Strategy 1) ABC management (vital signs) 2) Call Poison Control 3) Obtain best possible medical history 4) Order Labs 5) Prevent absorption of toxin 6) Enhance elimination (antidote)
General management strategy 1) ABC management Airway patency - head-tilt and chin-lift, removal of obstructions Breathing - assisted ventilation Circulation - colour change, sweating, decreased LOC - EKG, saline infusion, vasopressers
General Management Strategy 2) Call Poison Control Available 24/7 to provide poison treatment information Help guide treatment strategy Prevent unnecessary use of health care resources
General Management Strategy 3) Obtain accurate history Determine the causative agent Dose Time since exposure Route Demographics (age, weight) Symptoms* Physical Examination
What if you don’t know what medication/poison was ingested?
Identification of Toxidromes
What is a Toxidrome? Characteristic symptoms that are associated with a specific group of medications. These group of symptoms are known as a “Toxidrome”
Identification of Toxidromes Cholinergic Toxidrome “SLUDGE” Salivation, Lacrimation, Urination, Defecation, GI upset, Emesis Miosis, diaphoresis, bradycardia Causative Agents: Physostigmine, Organophosphates, Carbamate
Identification of Toxidromes Anticholinergic Toxidrome Hot as a Hare - fever Red as a Beet - flushing Mad as a Hatter – confusion, delirium Dry as a bone – dry skin/mucus membranes Mydriasis, tachycardia, urinary retention Causative Agents: Antihistamines, TCA`s, Anti- parkinson medications
Identification of Toxidromes Sympathomimetic Toxidrome Anxiety, Delusions, Sweating, Piloerrection, Seizures, Hyperreflexia, Mydriasis Causative Agents: cocaine, salbutamol,, amphetamines, ephedrine, pseudoephedrine, methamphetamine
Identification of Toxidromes Sedative/Hypnotic/Opiate Toxidrome Slurred speech, confusion, stupor, coma, apnoea, respiratory depression Hypotension, bradycardia, miosis Causative agents: opioids, anticonvulsants, antipyschotics, barbiturates, benzodiazepines, ethanol
Back to the Management Strategy
General Management Strategy 4) Order lab tests Confirm offending agent(s) Predict prognosis Direct therapy/monitoring Includes: Toxicology screen, anion gap, osmol gap, CBC, BUN, SCr, blood glucose, electrolytes, EKG monitoring
General Management Strategy 5) Prevent absorption *Activated Charcoal- first line therapy in most emergency departments Whole Bowel Irrigations- clears the GI tract using high volumes of PEG Orogastric Lavage- No benefit over the use of activated charcoal Syrup of Ipecac- NO LONGER RECOMMENDED / html
General Management Strategy Activated Charcoal Ability to adsorb substances due to its high surface area Offending agent(s) become trapped by the charcoal and are excreted in the feces Dosing: 1g/kg po OR by NG tube (usually given multiple times) AE: aspiration pneumonia, GI obstruction Contraindications: presence of ileus
General Management Strategy Activated Charcoal Does not adsorb the following compounds: Iron Lithium Lead Cyanide Alcohol
General Management Strategy 6) Enhance Elimination Hemodialysis/Hemoperfusion Administer Antidote
General Management Strategy Administer Antidote: *See my website for a more exhaustive list Offending AgentAntidote TylenolN-acetylcysteine AnticholinergicsPhysostigmine BenzodiazepinesFlumazenil CCBGlucagon, Calcium Beta BlockersGlucagon OpioidsNaloxone
Opioid Overdose Managment
Opioid Overdose Management Signs and Symptoms? Hint: Remember the toxidrome!
Opioid Overdose Management Signs and Symptoms? Hint: Remember the toxidrome! Decreased LOC, RR, GI motility Hypotension, bradycardia, miosis
Naloxone Reverses effects from opioid overdose Pure opioid receptor antagonist Duration of action minutes 0.4-2mg (IV,IM,SC); repeat q2-3 minutes until reversal of symptoms Use continuous IV infusion for exposure to long-acting opioids or SR formulations
Acetaminophen Overdose
Hamm J. Acute acetaminophen overdose in adolescents and adults.Critical Care Nurse; Jun 2000; 20(3) 69-74
N-acetylcysteine Indicated for the reversal of Acetaminophen toxicity Hepatoprotective agent Restores hepatic glutathione and acts as a glutathione substitute Prevents the production of the toxic by-product of acetaminophen
N-acetylcysteine Dosing 21 hour IV dosing regimen (3 doses) LD: 150 mg/kg (Max 15g) over 1 hour 2 nd dose: 50 mg/kg (max 5g) over 4 hours 3 rd dose: 100 mg/kg (max 10g) over 16 hours Oral dosing regimen also available (72 hours) Therapy is guided by the Matthew-Rumack Nomogram
Matthew-Rumack Nomogram The Merck Manual for Health Professionals. Acetaminophen Poisoning.
Anaesthetic Overdose/Refractory Cases
Lipids 20%- Intralipid® Used in anaesthetic overdose and refractory cases (unlabelled use) Mechanism unknown Effective for lipophilic medication overdose Suggested Dose: 1.5 mL/kg bolus infused over 1 minute (may repeat up to 2 times) Followed by 0.25 mL/kg/minute continuous infusion
Role of the Pharmacist Role in both the community and hospital setting Educating patients on the dangers of drug misuse Identifying potential at risk patients Identifying inappropriate medication regimens Medication Reconciliation
Highlights Majority of overdoses are accidental Rates of accidental overdose is steadily increasing Identifying Toxidromes plays a vital role in the management of overdose Activated charcoal and whole bowel irrigation are effective at lowering absorption Pharmacists can play a role in both the prevention and treatment of an overdose
References 1) Clinical Practice Guidelines. Management of Drug Overdose & Poisoning. Ministry of Health, Singapore. May ) Green SL, Dargan PI, Jones AL. Acute poisoning: understanding 90% of cases in a nutshell. Postgrad Med J. 2005;81: ) Tenenbein M et al. Efficacy of ipecac-induced emesis, orogastric lavage, and activated charcoal for acute drug overdose. Annals of Emergency Medicine; 16(8): ) Lab Tests Online. Emergency and Overdose Drug Tests. y/tab/test: Accessed March 22, y/tab/test 5) Thim T, Niels HV, et al. Initial assessment and treatment with the Airway, Breathing, Circulation, Disability, Exposure (ABCDE) approach. International Journal of General Medicine; 2012:
References 6)Centers for disease control and prevention. Home and Recreational Safety. Unintentional Poisoning Data and Statistics. Retrieved from ning/data.html ; accessed March 3, ning/data.html 7)Hodgman MJ et al. A review of Acetaminophen Toxicity. Crit Care Clin. 28 (2012) )G Cave et al. Intravenous Lipid Emulsion as Antidote Beyond Local Anesthetic Toxicity: A Systematic Review. Academic Emergency Medicine: 2009; 16: )Boyer EW. Management of Opioid Analgesic Overdose.. N Engl J Med: 367;
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