14. Poisoning Flashcards

1
Q

An OD P presents with hypertonia, hyperreflexia, extensor plantar reflexes and dilated pupils. What is the likely OD agent?

A

anti-cholinergics, e.g. TCAs

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2
Q

An OD P presents with reduced consciousness, constricted pupils and hypoventiation. What is the likely OD agent?

A

opiates, e.g. heroin, codein

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3
Q

A P has ECG abnormalities and hypokalaemia. What is the likely OD agent?

A

beta blockers

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4
Q

Which antidote would you give in opiate OD?

A

naloxone IV infusion

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5
Q

Which antidote would you give in benzodiazepine OD?

A

flumazenil

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6
Q

Which antidote would you give in beta blocker OD?

A

atropine + glucagone

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7
Q

Which antidote would you give in opiate OD?

A

N-acetylcysteine

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8
Q

Which antidote would you give in digoxin OD?

A

digibind

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9
Q

Explain the pathophysiology of paracetamol OD.

A
  • Most paracetamol metabolised in liver to sulfate (30%) or glucuronide (60%).
  • Small amount (10%) metabolised by P450 oxidation to toxic NAPQI (as other pathways are rate-limited)… conjugated with glutathione… inactive metabolites.
  • In substantial OD, NAPQI conjugation is saturated due to glutathione depletion… liver toxicity.
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10
Q

Name 3 ways in which pharmacokinetics are different in the elderly.

A
  1. impaired 1st pass metabolism… increased drug bioavailability
  2. reduced renal clearance… accumulation and ADRs
  3. impaired hepatic clearance… accumulation and ADRs
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11
Q

Name 2 ways in which pharmacodynamics are different in the elderly.

A
  1. age-related reduction in R sites
  2. reduced homeostatic reserve… increased sensitivity to drugs affecting postural control, cognitive function and visceral muscle function
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