Tricyclic antidepressant toxicity

(Redirigido desde «Tricyclic (TCA) toxicity»)

Background

  • Tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs) remain a leading cause of death from prescription drug overdose
  • Common TCAs: amitriptyline, nortriptyline, imipramine, desipramine, doxepin, clomipramine
  • Narrow therapeutic index — lethal dose is only 3-5x therapeutic dose
  • Multiple mechanisms of toxicity:
    • Sodium channel blockade → QRS widening → ventricular arrhythmias (most dangerous)
    • Anticholinergic effects → tachycardia, mydriasis, urinary retention, hyperthermia, AMS
    • Alpha-1 receptor blockade → hypotension
    • Norepinephrine/serotonin reuptake inhibition → initial hypertension, tachycardia
    • GABA-A antagonism → seizures
    • Potassium channel blockade → QT prolongation
  • Rapidly absorbed; toxicity can progress from alert to cardiac arrest within 1 hour

Clinical Features

Anticholinergic Toxidrome

  • Tachycardia, mydriasis, dry skin/mouth, urinary retention
  • Altered mental status (agitation → delirium → coma)
  • Decreased bowel sounds, ileus
  • Hyperthermia

Cardiovascular

  • Sinus tachycardia (most common cardiac finding)
  • Wide-complex tachycardia (sodium channel blockade)
  • Hypotension (alpha blockade, myocardial depression)
  • Right axis deviation of terminal QRS
  • Brugada-like pattern
  • Ventricular tachycardia/fibrillation (leading cause of death)

Neurologic

  • Seizures (occur in 10-20% of significant ingestions; usually brief but may be refractory)
  • Myoclonus, tremor
  • Coma

ECG Findings (Critical)

  • QRS >100 ms: increased risk of seizures
  • QRS >160 ms: increased risk of ventricular arrhythmias
  • R wave >3 mm in aVR (sensitive marker of sodium channel blockade)[1]
  • R/S ratio >0.7 in aVR
  • Right axis deviation of terminal 40 ms QRS
  • Sinus tachycardia, QT prolongation

Differential Diagnosis

  • Other sodium channel blocking agents: Class IA/IC antiarrhythmics, cocaine, diphenhydramine, carbamazepine
  • Anticholinergic toxicity
  • Other causes of wide-complex tachycardia
  • Serotonin syndrome (if combined with serotonergic agents)
  • Mixed overdose (coingestion is common)

Evaluation

  • ECG (most important test — get immediately)
    • Repeat ECG every 15-30 minutes in first 2 hours
  • BMP: monitor for metabolic acidosis (worsens sodium channel blockade)
  • Blood gas: pH (acidosis worsens toxicity; alkalosis is protective)
  • Acetaminophen and salicylate levels (coingestion screening)
  • Urine drug screen: may detect TCA, but false positives common (diphenhydramine, cyclobenzaprine, carbamazepine, phenothiazines)
  • TCA levels are NOT useful for acute management (do not correlate with toxicity)
  • Lactate, glucose

Management

Immediate

  • Continuous cardiac monitoring
  • IV access, supplemental O2
  • GI decontamination: activated charcoal 1 g/kg if presenting within 1-2 hours and patient is alert with protected airway
    • Anticholinergic effects delay gastric emptying → charcoal may be beneficial even at 2+ hours
  • Do NOT induce emesis (rapid deterioration risk)

Sodium Bicarbonate (Cornerstone of Treatment)

  • Indicated for:
    • QRS >100 ms
    • Ventricular arrhythmias
    • Hypotension refractory to fluids
  • Bolus: 1-2 mEq/kg IV push (repeat every 3-5 minutes until QRS narrows)
  • Infusion: 150 mEq NaHCO3 in 1L D5W at 150-250 mL/hr after initial bolus
  • Goal serum pH: 7.50-7.55 (alkalosis overcomes sodium channel blockade)
  • Mechanism: increases serum sodium (competes for channel) AND alkalosis favors protein-bound (non-toxic) TCA form
  • Continue until QRS normalizes

Seizures

  • Benzodiazepines first-line: lorazepam 2-4 mg IV, repeat q5min
  • Do NOT use phenytoin (also blocks sodium channels; may worsen cardiac toxicity)
  • If refractory: propofol, phenobarbital, or intubation with neuromuscular blockade
  • Treat aggressively — prolonged seizures cause acidosis which worsens cardiac toxicity

Hypotension

  • IV fluid bolus (NS 1-2L)
  • Sodium bicarbonate bolus
  • Norepinephrine (first-line vasopressor; alpha agonism counteracts TCA alpha blockade)
  • Avoid pure beta-agonists
  • Refractory: consider lipid emulsion therapy (ILE)

Refractory Ventricular Arrhythmias

  • Sodium bicarbonate is first-line
  • Lidocaine (Class IB — may be used)
  • Avoid Class IA (procainamide) and Class IC (flecainide) antiarrhythmics
  • Avoid amiodarone if possible (sodium channel blockade)
  • Lipid emulsion therapy: 20% Intralipid 1.5 mL/kg IV bolus then 0.25 mL/kg/min for refractory arrest
  • ECMO for refractory cardiac arrest

Monitoring

  • Serial ECGs every 15-30 min initially
  • Continuous telemetry for minimum 6 hours after last ECG abnormality resolves
  • ABG/VBG to guide bicarbonate therapy
  • Serum pH goal 7.50-7.55

Disposition

  • ICU admission for: QRS widening, arrhythmias, seizures, hypotension, altered mental status
  • Monitored bed for asymptomatic patients with normal ECG × 6 hours
  • Psychiatric evaluation after medical clearance for all intentional ingestions
  • Consider discharge only if:
    • Asymptomatic for 6 hours
    • Normal ECG with QRS <100 ms
    • Normal mental status
    • Psychiatric clearance obtained
  • Poison control: 1-800-222-1222

See Also

References

  1. Liebelt EL, et al. ECG lead aVR versus QRS interval in predicting seizures and arrhythmias in acute tricyclic antidepressant toxicity. Ann Emerg Med. 1995;26(2):195-201. PMID 7618784
  • Kerr GW, et al. Tricyclic antidepressant overdose: a review. Emerg Med J. 2001;18(4):236-241. PMID 11435353
  • Woolf AD, et al. Tricyclic antidepressant poisoning: an evidence-based consensus guideline for out-of-hospital management. Clin Toxicol. 2007;45(3):203-233. PMID 17453872
  • Body R, et al. Guidelines in Emergency Medicine Network (GEMNet): guideline for the management of tricyclic antidepressant overdose. Emerg Med J. 2011;28(4):347-368. PMID 21436332