Cholinergic toxidrome
From IDWiki
Background
Etiology
- Organophosphate poisoning from pesticides, insecticides, herbicides, and nerve agents
- Acetylcholinesterase inhibitor use including pyridostigmine and neostigmine
Clinical Manifestations
- Secretions everywhere
- Bronchorrhea, vomiting, diarrhea, diaphoresis, emesis, lacrimation, salivation, urination
- Miosis, blurred vision
- Confusion, weakness, seizures
- Muscle fascicultation
- Bradycardia, hypothermia, and tachypnea
Management
- Decontamination if ongoing skin exposure
- ABCs and intensive supportive care including early intubation
- Avoid succinylcholine
- Volume resuscitation without pressors is usually adequate
- Treat with anticholinergics
- Atropine 2 to 5 mg IV, doubled every 3 to 5 minutes until clinically improved
- Titrate to bronchorrhea, not tachycardia or mydriasis
- May need hundreds of milligrams of atropine over several days
- Can add pralidoxime to treat neuromuscular dysfunction
- Atropine 2 to 5 mg IV, doubled every 3 to 5 minutes until clinically improved
- Seizures: treated with benzos