Limited time75% off all plans
Get the app

Antidotes and Their Applications

On this page

Antidote Essentials - Poison Busters 101

An antidote counteracts a poison's harmful effects. Key types:

  • Chemical: Neutralizes poison via chemical reaction.
    • E.g., Chelators (Dimercaprol for heavy metals); Sodium thiosulfate for cyanide ($Na_2S_2O_3 + CN^- \rightarrow SCN^- + Na_2SO_3$).
  • Pharmacological: Blocks poison at receptor sites or its pathway.
    • E.g., Naloxone (opioids); Flumazenil (benzodiazepines).
  • Physiological: Produces effects opposing the poison's actions.
    • E.g., Atropine (organophosphates); Sodium bicarbonate (TCAs).

⭐ The ideal antidote is specific, effective, safe, and easy to administer.

Common Poisons & Antidotes Pt.1 - Everyday Overdoses

PoisonAntidote(s)Key Mechanism/Clinical Pearls
ParacetamolN-acetylcysteine (NAC)Replenishes glutathione, detoxifies NAPQI. Best within 8-10 hours. Rumack-Matthew nomogram guides therapy.
OpioidsNaloxoneCompetitive antagonist at $\mu, \kappa, \delta$ opioid receptors. Short duration (30-90 min); repeat doses (0.4-2 mg) or infusion. Reverses respiratory depression.
BenzodiazepinesFlumazenilCompetitive GABA-A antagonist. ⚠️ Cautious use: risk of seizures in chronic users or TCA overdose.
OrganophosphatesAtropine, Pralidoxime (PAM)Atropine (muscarinic antagonist for symptoms), Pralidoxime (AChE reactivator, give early before "aging"). Signs of atropinization. 📌 DUMBBELS: Diarrhea, Urination, Miosis, Bronchorrhea/Bronchospasm, Bradycardia, Emesis, Lacrimation, Salivation.

⭐ Flumazenil can precipitate seizures in chronic benzodiazepine users or mixed overdoses with tricyclic antidepressants.

Common Poisons & Antidotes Pt.2 - Metal & Methanol Mayhem

PoisonAntidote(s)Key Mechanism/Clinical Pearls
IronDeferoxamineChelates $Fe^{3+}$; "Vin rosé" urine.
LeadEDTA, DMSA (Succimer), BALChelators. 📌 "Lead Sucks ED BAlls". Encephalopathy: BAL + EDTA.
ArsenicBAL (Dimercaprol), DMSAChelators. BAL (acute severe), DMSA (less severe/chronic).
MercuryBAL, DMSA, DMPS (Unithiol)Chelators. DMPS for inorganic mercury.
Methanol/Ethylene GlycolFomepizole, EthanolInhibit alcohol dehydrogenase. Monitor osmolal gap (target < 10-15).
CyanideHydroxocobalamin; Na Nitrite + Na ThiosulfateHydroxocobalamin $\rightarrow$ cyanocobalamin. Nitrites $\rightarrow$ MetHb ($Fe^{3+}$ binds CN). Thiosulfate $\rightarrow$ thiocyanate (renal excretion).

⭐ Fomepizole is preferred over ethanol for toxic alcohol poisoning due to easier dosing and fewer side effects.

Specialized Antidotes - Cardiac & Clot Chaos

  • Anticoagulants:
    • Warfarin: Vitamin K (slow); PCC/FFP (rapid for major bleed or INR > 10).
    • Heparin: Protamine sulfate (1mg per 100U heparin); $Protamine^{(+)} + Heparin^{(-)} \rightarrow Neutral Complex$.
    • DOACs: Idarucizumab (Dabigatran); Andexanet alfa (Rivaroxaban, Apixaban).
  • Cardiac Glycosides (e.g., Digoxin):
    • Digoxin-specific Fab fragments (Digibind).
    • Digoxin-specific Fab binding and effect on digoxin levels
  • Beta-blockers (BB) & Calcium Channel Blockers (CCB) Overdose:
    • Initial: IV fluids, Atropine (bradycardia).
    • Antidotes: Calcium (gluconate/chloride for CCB), Glucagon, High-dose insulin euglycemic therapy (HIET).

%%{init: {'flowchart': {'htmlLabels': true}}}%% flowchart TD Tox["⚠️ Toxicity
• Severe BB/CCB toxicity• Cardiac crisis"] Supp["📋 Supportive
• IVF therapy• Atropine dose"] Calc["💊 Calcium
• Esp. for CCB use• Ionic stability"] Gluc["💊 Glucagon
• Positive inotrope• Bypass receptors"] HIET["⚠️ HIET Therapy
• Use if refractory• High dose insulin"]

Tox --> Supp
Supp --> Calc
Calc --> Gluc
Gluc --> HIET

style Tox fill:#FDF4F3, stroke:#FCE6E4, stroke-width:1.5px, rx:12, ry:12, color:#B91C1C
style Supp fill:#FEF8EC, stroke:#FBECCA, stroke-width:1.5px, rx:12, ry:12, color:#854D0E
style Calc fill:#F1FCF5, stroke:#BEF4D8, stroke-width:1.5px, rx:12, ry:12, color:#166534
style Gluc fill:#F1FCF5, stroke:#BEF4D8, stroke-width:1.5px, rx:12, ry:12, color:#166534
style HIET fill:#FDF4F3, stroke:#FCE6E4, stroke-width:1.5px, rx:12, ry:12, color:#B91C1C
> ⭐ High-dose insulin euglycemic therapy (HIET) is crucial for severe beta-blocker or calcium channel blocker toxicity.


## High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
> * **N-acetylcysteine** is crucial for **paracetamol** poisoning, restoring **glutathione**.
> * **Naloxone** is a competitive antagonist for **opioid** overdose.
> * **Flumazenil** reverses **benzodiazepine** toxicity by receptor antagonism.
> * **Organophosphate** poisoning requires **atropine** (symptomatic) and **pralidoxime** (enzyme reactivation).
> * **Fomepizole** is preferred for **methanol/ethylene glycol** poisoning, inhibiting alcohol dehydrogenase.
> * **Deferoxamine** chelates **iron**; **Dimercaprol (BAL)** for **heavy metals** like arsenic, lead, mercury.
> * **Protamine sulfate** neutralizes **heparin**; **Vitamin K** and **FFP** reverse **warfarin**.

Continue reading on Oncourse

Sign up for free to access the full lesson, plus unlimited questions, flashcards, AI-powered notes, and more.

CONTINUE READING — FREE

or get the app

Rezzy — Oncourse's AI Study Mate

Have doubts about this lesson?

Ask Rezzy, your AI Study Mate, to explain anything you didn't understand

Enjoying this lesson?

Get full access to all lessons, practice questions, and more.

START FOR FREE