Management of Poisoning Flashcards
Carbon Monoxide
100% oxygen
hyperbaric oxygen
Salicylate
IV bicarbonate
Haemodialysis
Lead poisoning
Dimercaprol
Calcium edetate
Ethylene glycol or methanol
1st Line: Fomepizole (inhibits alcohol dehydrogenase)
2nd Line: Ethanol
Haemodialysis
Why does carbon monoxide poisoning cause tissue hypoxia?
binds readily to haemoglobin, forming carboxyhaemoglobin
→ reduced oxygen-carrying capacity
Symptoms of carbon monoxide poisoning
headache: 90%
nausea + vomiting: 50%
vertigo: 50%
confusion: 30%
weakness: 20%
severe toxicity:
‘pink’ skin and mucosae, hyperpyrexia
arrhythmias
extrapyramidal features
What level of carboxyhaemoglobin on a blood gas would make you worry about carbon monoxide poisoning?
10 - 30% = symptomatic
> 30% = severe toxicity
Normal levels:
< 3% non-smokers
< 10% smokers
Management of corrosive substance ingestion
ABCDE
- ?airway swelling/ compromise
- look for peri-oral oedema
- High dose IV PPI
- do not try to neutralise with other substance
- Surgical ref if ?perforation
- Upper GI scope if symptomatic
- Oral fluids and observation if asymptomatic
Mechanism of action of cyanide
inhibits cytochrome c oxidase
=> cessation of mitochondrial electron transfer chain
Features of cyanide poisoning
‘classical’ features:
- brick-red skin
- smell of bitter almonds
ACUTE: hypoxia, hypotension, headache, confusion
CHRONIC: ataxia, peripheral neuropathy, dermatitis
Management of cyanide poisoning
Supportive measures:
- 100% oxygen
Definitive:
- hydroxocobalamin IV
- combination of amyl nitrite (inhaled), sodium nitrite (IV), and sodium thiosulfate (IV)
What is the chemical name for coolant/anti-freeze?
Ethylene glycol
Features of toxicity are divided into 3 stages:
Stages of ethylene glycol toxicity
Stage 1: similar to alcohol intoxication: confusion, slurred speech, dizziness
Stage 2: metabolic acidosis with high anion gap.
Also tachycardia, hypertension
Stage 3: acute kidney injury
Features of Mercury poisoning
paraesthesia
visual field defects
hearing loss
irritability
renal tubular acidosis
Features of methanol poisoning
similar to alcohol - intoxication, nausea
visual problems - blindness.
?secondary to accumulation of formic acid