Limited time75% off all plans
Get the app

Drug Toxicity and Overdose

On this page

General Management of Poisoning - The First Response

  • Initial Stabilization (ABCDs):
    • Airway: Secure.
    • Breathing: Oxygen, ventilate if needed.
    • Circulation: IV access, fluids, vasopressors.
    • Disability: GCS, pupils, glucose (check & correct).
  • Decontamination: Goal: Prevent absorption.
    • Skin/Eyes: Remove clothes, irrigate.
    • GI Decontamination:
      • Activated Charcoal (AC): 1 g/kg. Best within 1 hr. 📌 Not for PHAILS (Petroleum, Heavy metals, Alcohols, Iron, Lithium, Solvents/Corrosives).
      • Gastric Lavage: Rarely used; within 1 hr for severe cases.
      • Whole Bowel Irrigation (WBI): Body packers, SR tabs, metals.
  • Enhanced Elimination:
    • Multiple Dose AC (MDAC): For enterohepatic recirculation (Theophylline, Phenobarbital, Carbamazepine, Dapsone).
    • Urinary Alkalinization: Salicylates, Phenobarbital.
    • Hemodialysis: Severe cases (Salicylates, Lithium, Ethylene glycol, Methanol, Barbiturates). 📌 I STUMBLE.

⭐ Prioritize ABCDs stabilization before decontamination or antidotes in all poisoning cases.

Paracetamol (Acetaminophen) Toxicity

  • Mechanism: Glutathione depletion → NAPQI (toxic metabolite) accumulation → hepatic necrosis.
  • Toxic dose: >150 mg/kg or >7.5 g. Peak hepatotoxicity: 72-96h.
  • Diagnosis: Rumack-Matthew nomogram (use ≥4h post-ingestion).
  • Antidote: N-acetylcysteine (NAC).
    • IV regimen: 150 mg/kg (1h), then 50 mg/kg (4h), then 100 mg/kg (16h).
    • Best if given within 8-10h.

    ⭐ NAC is also used for contrast-induced nephropathy prevention. Rumack-Matthew nomogram for paracetamol poisoning

Opioid Overdose

  • Classic triad: Coma, respiratory depression, miosis (pinpoint pupils).
    • ⚠️ Mydriasis: meperidine, hypoxia.
  • Antidote: Naloxone.
    • Dose: 0.4-2 mg IV/IM/SC; repeat. Max initial: 10 mg.
    • Continuous IV infusion for long-acting opioids (e.g., methadone) due to naloxone's short half-life (30-90 min).

OPs & Heavy Metals - Chemical Chaos

  • Organophosphates (OPs): Irreversible AChE inhibitors.
    • 📌 DUMBELS/SLUDGE (muscarinic); Muscle weakness, paralysis (nicotinic).
    • Rx: Atropine (2-5 mg IV, titrate), Pralidoxime (PAM, 1-2 g IV for nicotinic signs, <48h). Organophosphorus Poisoning: Symptoms and Management
  • Heavy Metals: Chelation therapy is key.
    • Lead (Pb): Paint, batteries. Colic, anemia, wrist drop. Chelation: BAL+EDTA (severe), Succimer (DMSA).
    • Arsenic (As): Garlic breath, rice-water stools. Chelation: BAL, DMSA.
    • Mercury (Hg): Neurotoxicity (organic), renal (inorganic). Chelation: DMSA, BAL (not methylHg).
    • Iron (Fe): GI bleed, acidosis, liver damage. Rx: Deferoxamine IV (if severe, serum Fe >500 µg/dL). ⭐ > Deferoxamine causes "vin rosé" urine.
  • Toxic Alcohols (Methanol, Ethylene Glycol): ↑AGMA, ↑Osmolal gap.
    • Methanol → Formic acid (blindness). Ethylene Glycol → Oxalic acid (renal failure).
    • Rx: Fomepizole (15 mg/kg LD) or Ethanol; Hemodialysis. Folate (Methanol), Thiamine/Pyridoxine (EG).

Toxidrome Spotting - The Poison Profiler

Recognizing toxidromes is key when the specific poison is unknown.

ToxidromeVitals (HR,BP,RR,T)PupilsSkinBowel SoundsMental StatusOther Signs
Anticholinergic↑HR, ↑Temp; BP/RR variableMydriasisHot, Dry, RedAgitated, DeliriumUrinary retention, Myoclonus; "Mad as a hatter..."
CholinergicBradycardia (musc) or Tachycardia (nic); RR/Temp variableMiosisDiaphoreticConfusion, Coma📌 SLUDGE-BAM; Bronchorrhea, Bronchospasm
Opioid↓HR, ↓BP, ↓RR, ↓TempMiosisCool, ClammyCNS DepressionRespiratory depression, Track marks
Sympathomimetic↑HR, ↑BP, ↑RR, ↑TempMydriasisDiaphoreticAgitated, PsychosisSeizures, Tremors, Hyperreflexia
Sedative-Hypnotic↓HR, ↓BP, ↓RR, ↓TempVariableCoolCNS DepressionSlurred speech, Ataxia, Nystagmus, Hyporeflexia

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Key antidotes: N-acetylcysteine (paracetamol), naloxone (opioids), flumazenil (benzodiazepines), atropine/pralidoxime (organophosphates).
  • Identify toxidromes (e.g., cholinergic, anticholinergic) for rapid diagnosis.
  • Management: ABCDE, decontamination (activated charcoal), enhanced elimination.
  • Paracetamol toxicity: Hepatotoxicity risk; use N-acetylcysteine per Rumack-Matthew nomogram.
  • Organophosphates: Treat with atropine (muscarinic) and pralidoxime (cholinesterase regeneration).
  • Salicylate poisoning: Mixed acid-base disturbance; alkaline diuresis is key.
  • TCA overdose: Sodium bicarbonate for QRS prolongation (cardiotoxicity).

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