Poisoning
2025-03-26 15:11:08 - Admin Name
Causes
- Organophosphates (carbamate)
- Local medicines
- Petroleum compounds: paraffin
- Carbon monoxide
- Plants ("magic mushrooms")
- Bleach
- Snake bite
- Iron Poisoning
- Salicylate overdose
Important points in history
Remember there may not be a clear history
- Sudden unexplained illness in previously healthy child
- Unusual behaviour
- Try to establish the potential poison that the patient may have had exposure to
- Enquire about quantity exposed to/ taken
- Earliest possible exposure time
- Ask if container or sample of poison available
- Other children involved? If so, what symptoms do they have?
- Ask about access to "poisons"
Important points in examination
- Drowsiness/ coma/ BCS
- Convulsions (organophospates)
- Diarrhoea (if a child is dehydrated, but salivating ++ consider organophosphate poisoning, with pin point pupils)
- Hypersecretions and noisy wet breathing: organophosphate poisoning
- Pupillary abnormalities - pin-point pupils (organophosphate poisoning, sometimes mushooms); dilated pupils (barbiturates)
- Ataxia
- Tachypnoea/ tachycardia or flushing/ bradycardia (organophosphate poisoning)
- Wheezing (paraffin inhalation)
- Cardiac arrhythmia or hypotension
- Presence of burns within the mouth (bleach or acid with oesophageal injury)
- Stridor (laryngeal damage)
- Abdominal distension (local medicine intoxication)
- Acidotic
Investigations
- Mainly depend on the presentation and specific poison exposure
Indications for admission
- Exposure to potentially fatal poison
- Ill/ haemodynamically unstable patient
- Deliberate poisoning
- Consider observation in short stay if well otherwise
Management
- Primary assessment (ABCD) to recognize life-threatening emergencies
- Resuscitate/ stabilize the patient if necessary
- Assess potential lethality of the overdose
- Definitive management of specific condition once stabilized
- Reassess ABCD at frequent intervals to assess progress/ detect deterioration
- Test for hypoglycaemia, if present treat with 5 ml/kg 10% glucose IV or PO
- Treat convulsions
- Give maintenance IV fluids
- Use antidote for specific poison if available (see below)
- Use activated charcoal (1g/kg), except for heavy metals, if available
- Gastric lavage (used occasionally for ferrous sulphate poisoning) only if:
- a potentially fatal dose has been taken
- the airway is protected
- Avoid if reduced level of consciousness, and in hydrocarbons or corrosives
DO NOT induce vomitingTreatment of specific poisonsOrganophosphate compounds
Cholinergic signs: DUMBELS: Defecation, Urination, Miosis, Bronchorrhea/Bronchospasm/Bradycardia, Emesis, Lacrimation, Salivation. Also, fasciculations, muscle weakness and paralysis
- Get rid of poison
- Eyes (irrigation)
- Skin (remove clothing) and bathe
- Specific treatment
- Atropine 20 micrograms/kg IV or IM every 15 min until secretions have stopped and the chest is dry
- Monitor regularly (respiratory rate, coma score, heart rate, secretions) e.g. every 15 minutes initially, then every 30 minutes
- Assisted ventilation if necessary
Local medicines
Usually taken for diarrhoea and vomiting. May lead to acidosis, respiratory distress, paralytic ileus.
- Rehydration i.e. give IV fluids and glucose
- Pass an NGT and leave on free drainage
Petroleum compounds (Paraffin)
Frequently presents with features of respiratory distress. May cause pneumonitis, pneumomediastinum, pneumothorax and subcutaneous emphysema.
- Do not induce vomiting
- Give oxygen if necessary
- Chest x-ray if symptomatic
- Antibiotic therapy may be needed for secondary chest infections
Carbon monoxide poisoning
Toxic effects are due to hypoxia. Oxygen saturations can be misleading.
- Give 100% oxygen
Poisonous plants
Usually only small quantities are ingested
- Mainly supportive and activate charcoal if available
Bleach
- Liberal fluids and milk
- Do not induce vomiting
Snake bite
- Check for fang marks, note if scarifications present or not
- Look for evidence of use of a tourniquet
- Ask about time of bite
- Check bitten limb for swelling, pulses, colour and viability
- Check for systemic evidence of envenoming - fever, altered coma score, shock, anaemia
- Mark with a pen, the level of swelling on a limb so that further swelling can be assessed
Management
- ABC
- FBC and diff, blood culture and blood clotting time (see how long it takes for blood to clot in a plain tube)
- Group and cross match and hold blood unless anaemic
- Place an IV infusion of normal saline
- Check that tetanus toxid immunisation is up to date; if not give it. Immunisation protocol
If local swelling is marked or there is evidence of systemic envenoming:
- Inform senior. Anti snake venom will be required
- Give 40mls in 200mls of normal saline IV over 1hr but have adenaline standing by: anaphylactic reactions are not uncommon.
- If circulation is threatened inform the surgical team on call as compartment syndrome may need fasciotomy.
- Treat pain appropriately - morphine may be needed
Iron poisoning
- Gastrointestinal (GI) phase: 30 minutes to 6 hours after ingestion
- Latent, or relative stability, phase: 6 to 24 hours after ingestion
- Shock and metabolic acidosis: 6 to 72 hours after ingestion
- Hepatotoxicity/hepatic necrosis: 12 to 96 hours after ingestion
- Bowel obstruction: 2 to 8 weeks after ingestion
- Supportive therapy to maintain adequate blood pressure and electrolyte balance is essential
- I.V. fluid resuscitation
- May need potassium and glucose supplementation
- Consider desferrioxamine 15mg/kg/hr I.V. if available
- If oliguria or anuria develop, take sample for U&E, monitor BP, catheterise andconsider peritoneal dialysis
Salicylate overdose
Presents with tachypnoea, metabolic acidosis, and to a lesser extent, tachycardia. Early symptoms include tinnitus, vertigo, nausea, vomiting, and diarrhoea.
More severe intoxication can cause fever, altered mental status, coma, non-cardiogenic pulmonary oedema, and death.
- ABC
- Administer multiple doses of activated charcoal (first dose: 1 g/kg orally up to 50 g)
- Administer supplemental glucose in patients with altered mental status, even if serum glucose concentration is normal: IV dextrose 50 g as 100 mL of 50 percent dextrose
- Send U&E and RBS
- Correct electrolyte abnormalities
- Consider peritoneal dialysis