Ep 180 Acetaminophen Poisoning – Pitfalls in Assessment and Management
Emergency Medicine Cases - Un pódcast de Dr. Anton Helman - Martes
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A whopping 1 billion doses of acetaminophen (or paracetamol, as it’s called in some countries) are taken safely each year. With that much acetaminophen being ingested it’s no surprise that about 10,000 people in Canada every year overdose on it. Some acetaminophen overdoses are easy to diagnose and relatively straightforward to manage in the ED. But there are many points along the way of taking care of these patients where pitfalls can rear their ugly heads leading to less than ideal outcomes. We’re hoping that by the end of this episode you will recognize all the places where it is easy to trip up in managing these patients and provide stellar care for your next acetaminophen overdose patient. Our guest expert toxicologists Dr. Emily Austin and Dr. Margaret Thompson answer questions such as: how is massive acetaminophen overdose a totally different toxidrome compared to non-massive overdose? Which patients are the ones that we are most likely to miss and have poor outcomes? What are the common ways in which we misinterpret the Rumack-Matthew nomogram? What are indications for fomepizole and dialysis after acetaminophen poisoning? Is hyperphosphatemia the best predictor of need for liver transplant in acetaminophen poisoning? and many more... Podcast production, sound design & editing by Anton Helman; voice editing by Braedon Paul Written Summary and blog post by Anton Helman March, 2023 Cite this podcast as: Helman, A. Austin, E. Thompson, M. Ep 180 Acetaminophen Poisoning - Pitfalls in Assessment and Management. Emergency Medicine Cases. March, 2023. https://emergencymedicinecases.com/acetaminophen-poisoning-pitfalls-assessment-management. Accessed September 17, 2024 Résumés EM Cases3 clinical presentation scenarios of acetaminophen poisoning It is useful to think of the clinical presentation as one of the 3 scenarios to help guide management: * Single recent acetaminophen overdose with purposeful intent * Supra-therapeutic acetaminophen overdose over prolonged period over time or staggered, intended or unintended * Massive acetaminophen overdose Most acetaminophen poisoning deaths are a result of either a delayed presentation after deliberate overdose, or from supra-therapeutic dosing for fever or pain over several days. Pitfall #1 is failing to recognize the seriousness of an acetaminophen overdose when it is delayed or in patients who have been taking supra-therapeutic doses over several days Acetaminophen poisoning is sometimes missed because often patients do not know that many medications include acetaminophen such as Percocet, NyQuil/DayQuil, Excedrin, Alka-Seltzer Plus, Mucinex, Robitussin, Goody's. Pitfall #2 is neglecting to ask patients about all the medications they take including over-the-counter ones and exactly how much they take of each; supra-therapeutic dosing of over-the-counter medications may be the first clue to a life-threatening acetaminophen overdose Patient factors that may augment toxicity in the setting of an acetaminophen overdose include: * Additional hepatotoxic medications/medications that are known to potentiate liver toxicity of acetaminophen (e.g. Phenytoin, Trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole) * co-ingestions which may require additional treatment * chronic alcohol use * malnutrition * chronic liver disease Pitfall #3 is failure to recognize patient factors that may potentiate or augment acetaminophen toxicity including other medications,