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Antidotes and Specific Therapies

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General Principles & Common Antidotes - Antidote Arsenal

  • Antidotes counteract poison effects by:
    • Receptor antagonism (e.g., Naloxone)
    • Chelating toxins (e.g., Deferoxamine)
    • Replenishing depleted substrates (e.g., N-acetylcysteine)
    • Enzyme reactivation (e.g., Pralidoxime)
  • Key Poison-Antidote Pairs:
    • Paracetamol: N-acetylcysteine (NAC). Dose by nomogram.
    • Opioids: Naloxone. Titrate to respiration. 📌 "Wake up, breathe!"
    • Benzodiazepines: Flumazenil. ⚠️ Caution: seizures in chronic users/co-ingestants.
    • Organophosphates/Carbamates: Atropine (muscarinic symptoms), Pralidoxime (AChE regeneration, for OPs).
    • Methanol/Ethylene Glycol: Fomepizole (preferred) or Ethanol. Inhibits alcohol dehydrogenase.
    • Iron: Deferoxamine. IV. "Vin rosé" urine.
    • Cyanide: Hydroxocobalamin or Sodium thiosulfate + Sodium nitrite.
    • Digoxin: Digoxin-specific antibody (Fab) fragments.
    • Beta-blockers: Glucagon, High-dose insulin euglycemic therapy (HIET).
    • Calcium Channel Blockers: Calcium salts, Glucagon, HIET.
    • Heavy Metals (Pb, As, Hg): Chelators (e.g., Dimercaprol, Succimer, EDTA).

⭐ N-acetylcysteine for paracetamol poisoning is most effective if given within 8-10 hours post-ingestion.

Antidote Chart for Toxicology Management

Cholinergic & Anticholinergic Poisoning - Toxidrome Tango

Cholinergic (Wet): ↑ACh.

  • 📌 DUMBBELLS: Diarrhea, Urination, Miosis, Bronchorrhea/Bradycardia, Emesis, Lacrimation, Salivation/Sweating.
  • Causes: Organophosphates (OPs), carbamates, mushrooms.
  • Rx:
    • Atropine: ACh antagonist. Adults: 2-5 mg IV; Peds: 0.02-0.05 mg/kg. Titrate: dry secretions, HR >80.
    • Pralidoxime (2-PAM): OPs. Reactivates AChE. 1-2 g IV. Use before "aging".
    • Diazepam for seizures.

Anticholinergic (Dry): ↓ACh.

  • 📌 "Red as beet, dry as bone, blind as bat, mad as hatter, hot as hare, full as flask."
  • Causes: Datura, belladonna, TCAs, antihistamines.
  • Rx:
    • Supportive: Cooling, hydration.
    • Physostigmine: AChE inhibitor. 0.5-2 mg IV slowly. For severe symptoms.
    • ⚠️ Contra: TCA (QRS >100ms), bradycardia.
    • Benzodiazepines for agitation.

Classic Toxidromes Chart

⭐ Physostigmine is contraindicated in TCA overdose with QRS prolongation (>100 ms) due to the risk of precipitating asystole or complete heart block.

Heavy Metals, Toxic Alcohols, Cyanide - Detox Diversions

  • Heavy Metals:
    • Lead: Paint, batteries. Features: Abdominal colic, anemia (basophilic stippling), encephalopathy, wrist/foot drop. Burton's line. Antidotes: Dimercaprol (BAL), CaNa2EDTA, Succimer (DMSA). 📌 Mnemonic "LEAD": Lines, Encephalopathy/Erythrocyte stippling, Abdominal colic/Anemia, Drop.
    • Arsenic: Garlic breath, rice-water stools, Mee's lines. Antidotes: BAL, DMSA.
    • Mercury: Neurotoxicity (Minamata), erethism, renal damage. Antidotes: BAL, DMSA, DMPS.
    • Iron: GI upset, shock, metabolic acidosis. Serum Fe > 350-500 mcg/dL. Antidote: Deferoxamine (vin rosé urine).
  • Toxic Alcohols:
    • Methanol (→ Formic Acid): ↑ Osmolar & Anion gap, "snowstorm" vision. Antidote: Fomepizole/Ethanol, Folate, Hemodialysis.
    • Ethylene Glycol (→ Oxalic Acid): ↑ Osmolar & Anion gap, AKI (calcium oxalate crystals), hypocalcemia. Antidote: Fomepizole/Ethanol, Thiamine, Pyridoxine, Hemodialysis. Calcium oxalate crystals (microscopy)
  • Cyanide:
    • Inhibits cytochrome oxidase → cellular hypoxia.
    • Features: Bitter almond breath, seizures, lactic acidosis.
    • Antidotes: Hydroxocobalamin (preferred); Nitrites + Sodium Thiosulfate.

    ⭐ Ethylene glycol poisoning: envelope-shaped calcium oxalate crystals in urine are key for diagnosing AKI.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • N-acetylcysteine is crucial for paracetamol poisoning, by replenishing glutathione stores.
  • Naloxone rapidly reverses opioid overdose effects by antagonizing μ-receptors.
  • Flumazenil antagonizes benzodiazepines; use with caution due to seizure precipitation risk.
  • Organophosphate poisoning requires atropine (muscarinic effects) and pralidoxime (enzyme reactivation).
  • Sodium bicarbonate alkalinizes for TCA cardiotoxicity and enhances salicylate elimination.
  • Deferoxamine is the specific chelator for acute iron poisoning.
  • Fomepizole or ethanol inhibits alcohol dehydrogenase in methanol/ethylene glycol toxicity.

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