0071643192.pdf

(Barré) #1

TOXICOLOGY


SYMPTOMS/EXAM
■ Nausea and vomiting
■ Slurred speech, ataxia, depressed mental status, and seizures
■ The classic presentation is persistent seizures and resultant metabolic
acidosis.

DIAGNOSIS
■ Should be suspected in any patient with seizures who is undergoing
treatment for TB or is refractory to standard treatment
■ INH levels take too long to be clinically useful in the ED.

TREATMENT
■ Supportive care
■ Activated charcoal if early and no CNS depression
■ Benzodiazepines for status epilepticus until antidote available
■ Antidote: Pyridoxine (vitamin B 6 )replenishes vitamin B 6 stores to help
replete GABA.

COMPLICATIONS
■ Chronic large doses of pyridoxine may cause peripheral neuropathy.

Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitors

Reverse transcriptase inhibitors are antiretroviral agents used in the treatment
of HIV. Highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) refers to a drug regimen
combining reverse transcriptase inhibitors with agents from two other anti-
retroviral classes, protease inhibitors and fusion inhibitors.

Reverse transcriptase inhibitors include didanosine (ddI), stavudine (d4T),
lamivudine (3TC), and others.

MECHANISM/TOXICITY
■ Mitochondrial toxicity →lactic acidosis, hepatotoxicity, pancreatitis.

SYMPTOMS/EXAM
■ Malaise
■ Tachypnea
■ N/V, abdominal pain

DIAGNOSIS
■ Suspect based on clinical presentation.
■ Confirmed with laboratory findings (elevated lactate, etc.)
■ Muscle or liver biopsy is definitive for diagnosis of mitochondrial toxicity.

TREATMENT
■ Discontinue implicated drug(s).
■ Supportive care
■ If severe lactic acidosis →sodium bicarbonate
■ Hemodialysis may be considered.

INH is listed as a cause of an
anion gap metabolic acidosis
because it causes a profound
lactic acidosis from seizure
activity. It does not cause
lactic acidosis when seizures
are not present.

Reverse transcriptase
inhibitors may cause a
profound lactic acidosis due to
mitochondrial toxicity.
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