14 - Digoxin Flashcards
1
Q
Indications for digoxin
A
- CHF
- Atrial fibrillation, atrial flutter
- PAT (paroxysmal atrial tachycardia)
2
Q
Digoxin PK
A
- BA = 60-80%
- Vd = 5-10 L/kg
- Protein binding = 25%
- Elimination
- 60-80% renal
- t1/2 = 30-50 h
3
Q
Describe digoxin metabolism
A
- Enteric inactivation of digoxin by Eubacterium lentum (inactivated in the gut)
- Up to 40% inactivation in 10-15% of the population (we don’t know if someone is in this population)
- Antibiotic interaction (2-fold serum cardiac glycoside concentration increases => potential toxicity)
4
Q
Digoxin PD
A
- Onset of action (po) = 1.5-6 h
- Maximal effect (po) = 4-6 h
5
Q
Digoxin toxic dose
A
- 1 mg in child (few leaves of oleander or foxglove)
- 3 mg in adult
- Dose > 10 mg in healthy subjects (> 3 mg in healthy children) = cardiac arrest
6
Q
Toxic digoxin serum levels?
A
> 2 ng/mL
7
Q
Risk factors for digoxin toxicity
A
- Drug interactions
- Amiodarone (inhibits renal tubular secretion of digoxin)
- Antibiotics (decrease population of chronic bacteria)
- Quinidine
- Verapamil
- Disease -> renal failure, MI, electrolyte imbalances
- Mortality = 3-25% higher in elderly
8
Q
Signs & sx of acute digoxin overdose
A
- Vomiting
- Hyperkalemia
- Sinus bradycardia
- Sinoatrial arrest
- 2nd or 3rd degree AV block
- Ventricular tachycardia/fibrillation
- *Note – digoxin toxicity causes intracellular myocardial hypercalcemia
9
Q
Signs & sx of chronic digoxin intoxication
A
- Visual disturbances (dyschromatopsia)
- Weakness
- Sinus bradycardia
- Atrial fibrillation
- Ventricular arrhythmias (tachycardia, fibrillation)
- Accelerated junctional tachycardia
- Paroxysmal atrial tachycardia
- Hypokalemia and hypomagnesemia (from use of diuretics)
10
Q
Digoxin overdose management
A
- Emergency and supportive measures
- Protect airways, assist ventilation
- Treat hyperkalemia
- Treat bradycardia or heart block
- Treat ventricular tachyarrhythmias
- Decontamination (gastric emptying, activated charcoal)
- Enhanced elimination (MDAC)
- Antidotes = digoxin-specific antibody fragments (DigiFab)
- Monitor digoxin levels
11
Q
Indications of DigiFab
A
- Life-threatening cardiac glycosides toxicity
- Px w/ progressive bradydysrhythmias (severe sinus bradycardia or 2nd or 3rd-degree heart block unresponsive to atropine)
- Px w/ severe ventricular dysrhythmias (VT or VF)
- Px w/ potassium > 5.5 mEq/mL
- Acute ingestions:
- > 4 mg in healthy child (> 0.1 mg/kg)
- > 10 mg in healthy adult
- Serum concentrations > 10 ng/mL (lower in elderly)
- Rapid progression of clinical signs and sx (cardiac and GI effects) and rising potassium levels
12
Q
Describe DigiFab
A
- High specificity (no cross-reactivity w/ endogenous steroids)
- Sufficient cross-reactivity for other cardiac glycosides
- Pure, safe, and effective
- DigiFab antibodies bind to intravascular free digoxin
- Binding affinity of DigiFab for digoxin much greater than affinity of digoxin for ATPase
13
Q
Dose and administration of DigiFab
A
- Administered as infusion over 15 minutes to 2 hours (usually at least 30 minutes)
- Time to onset of response = 19 min (0-60 minutes)
- Time to complete response = 90 mins (30-360 minutes)
- Dose:
- Each vial binds 0.5 mg of digoxin
- # of vials = digoxin serum concentration (ng/mL) * weight
14
Q
Empiric dosing of DigiFab
A
- Acute ingestion = 10-20 vials for adult and child
- Chronic toxicity = 3-6 vials for adult; 1-2 vials for child
15
Q
Are digoxin serum levels measured after administration of DigiFab?
A
No, serum levels become irrelevant