BETA AND CALCIUM CHANNEL BLOCKER TOXICITY AND POISONING Flashcards
Approach to the Critically Ill Beta and Calcium Channel Blocker Toxicity and Poisoning
Monitor
Oxygen
Vitals
IV Access
ECG / Airway Equipment
AIRWAY / BREATHING
CNS Depression requiring airway protection is infrequent
Peri- and Post-intubation cardiac arrest is common
Optimize hemodynamics:
IVF resuscitation
Ketamine at 1/2 dose
Vasoactive infusion before and after intubation
CIRCULATION
Hypotension: 10-20 mL/kg IV crystalloid bolus PRN
POCUS:
heart (ejection fraction and wall motion)
vena cava (size and collapsibility)
lungs (pulmonary edema)
CCB TOXICITY:
Atropine 0.5 - 1 mg q 3-5 min (max 3 doses)
Calcium Gluconate 3-6 g IV q10-20 min
Calcium Chloride 1-2 g IV q 10-20 min
Vasoplegic Shock: Norepinephrine 0.05 - 0.3 mcg / kg / min
Cardiogenic Shock:
Epinephrine 0.05 - 2 mcg / kg / min
Myocardial Dysfunction:
Insulin Regular Monotherapy 1-20 units/kg IV bolus, followed by 1-2 units/kg/h infusion
AND
10% dextrose in water 3-5 mL/kg at 1.5-2x maintenance
BETA BLOCKER TOXICITY
Atropine 0.5 - 1 mg q 3-5 min (max 3 doses)
Glucagon:
3-10 mg IV bolus follwed by 3-5 mg / h infusion
Vasoplegic Shock: Norepinephrine 0.05 - 0.3 mcg / kg / min
Cardiogenic Shock:
Epinephrine 0.05 - 2 mcg / kg / min
Isoprotenerol:
20-60 mcg IV bolus followed by 1-20 mcg / min infusion
Myocardial Dysfunction:
Insulin Regular Monotherapy 1-20 units/kg IV bolus, followed by 1-2 units/kg/h infusion
AND
10% dextrose in water 3-5 mL/kg at 1.5-2x maintenance
DISABILITY
CNS Depression is infrequent
History & Physical
Hypotension
Bradydysrhythmia
Shock
Death
Things to Ask:
What was taken
When was it taken (TIME)
How much was taken (DOSE AND NUMBER OF TABLETS)
Type of preparation (IMMEDIATE OR SUSTAINED RELEASE)
How it was taken (ROUTE)
What else was taken (CO-INGESTIONS?)
Why was it taken (INTENTIONAL VS ACCIDENTAL)
COLLATERAL INFORMATION: medication containers, EMS
ONSET OF SYMPTOMS
Look For:
Bradycardia > 50%
Hypotension > 50%
CNS Depression (less common)
Investigations
Accucheck (part of inital assessment)
Hyperglycemia is common in CCB
Hypoglycemia is common in BB
CBC
lytes - hypokalemia may appear in CCB
creatinine
LFT
INR / PTT
Serum Osolarity
Osmolar gap
VBG
Lactate
Quantitave drug levels: (acetaminophen, salicylates, ethanol)
Urine Tox Screen
Pregnancy test
ECG
CXR (aspiration and pulmonary edema)
Beta Blocker Toxicity Management
BETA BLOCKER TOXICITY
Atropine 0.5 - 1 mg q 3-5 min (max 3 doses)
Glucagon:
3-10 mg IV bolus follwed by 3-5 mg / h infusion
Vasoplegic Shock: Norepinephrine 0.05 - 0.3 mcg / kg / min
Cardiogenic Shock:
Epinephrine 0.05 - 2 mcg / kg / min
Isoprotenerol:
20-60 mcg IV bolus followed by 1-20 mcg / min infusion
Myocardial Dysfunction:
Insulin Regular Monotherapy 1-20 units/kg IV bolus, followed by 1-2 units/kg/h infusion
AND
10% dextrose in water 3-5 mL/kg at 1.5-2x maintenance
Calcium Channel Blocker Toxicity
Atropine 0.5 - 1 mg q 3-5 min (max 3 doses)
Calcium Gluconate 3-6 g IV q10-20 min
Calcium Chloride 1-2 g IV q 10-20 min
Vasoplegic Shock: Norepinephrine 0.05 - 0.3 mcg / kg / min
Cardiogenic Shock:
Epinephrine 0.05 - 2 mcg / kg / min
Myocardial Dysfunction:
Insulin Regular Monotherapy 1-20 units/kg IV bolus, followed by 1-2 units/kg/h infusion
AND
10% dextrose in water 3-5 mL/kg at 1.5-2x maintenance