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Induction of Labor at Term for Severe Antenatal Lead Poisoning

Mohan, Sanjay; Mahonski, Sarah; Koziatek, Christian; Cohen, Emily T; Smith, Silas; Su, Mark K
INTRODUCTION/BACKGROUND:Antenatal lead exposure is associated with multiple adverse maternal and fetal consequences. Maternal blood lead concentrations as low as 10 µg/dL have been associated with gestational hypertension, spontaneous abortion, growth retardation, and impaired neurobehavioral development. Current treatment recommendations for pregnant women with a blood lead level (BLL) ≥ 45 µg/dL include chelation. We report a successful case of a mother with severe gestational lead poisoning treated with induction of labor in a term infant. CASE REPORT/METHODS:A 22-year-old G2P1001 female, at 38 weeks and 5 days gestation, was referred to the emergency department for an outpatient venous BLL of 53 µg/dL. The decision was made to limit ongoing prenatal lead exposure by emergent induction as opposed to chelation. Maternal BLL just prior to induction increased to 70 µg/dL. A 3510 g infant was delivered with APGAR scores of 9 and 9 at 1 and 5 min. Cord BLL at delivery returned at 41 µg/dL. The mother was instructed to avoid breastfeeding until her BLLs decreased to below 40 µg/dL, consistent with federal and local guidelines. The neonate was empirically chelated with dimercaptosuccinic acid. On postpartum day 2, maternal BLL decreased to 36 µg/dL, and the neonatal BLL was found to be 33 µg/mL. Both the mother and neonate were discharged to an alternative lead-free household on postpartum day 4.
PMID: 37365427
ISSN: 1937-6995
CID: 5522332

Is epinephrine harmful in volatile substance use-induced cardiac arrest? [Comment]

Hoffman, Robert S
PMID: 37988118
ISSN: 1556-9519
CID: 5608462

Insulin concentrations following termination of high-dose insulin euglycemic therapy [Case Report]

Wiener, Brian G; Smith, Cameron T; Patel, Savan; Hoffman, Robert S
INTRODUCTION:High-dose insulin therapy is used in patients with calcium channel blocker and beta-adrenergic antagonist overdoses. The pharmacokinetics of insulin are scantly reported following high-dose insulin therapy. We present two cases of persistently elevated insulin concentrations following high-dose insulin therapy. CASE REPORTS:A 50-year-old woman and a 45-year-old man experienced hypotension after overdosing on amlodipine and atenolol. They were treated with high-dose insulin therapy for 54 hours at 2 units/kilogram/hour and 48 hours at 10 units/kilogram/hour, respectively. Following termination, serum insulin elimination was studied. Insulin concentrations remained greater than 1,000 µU/mL (fasting reference 2.6-24.9 µU/mL) for longer than 4 hours (case 1) and 11 hours (case 2) and greater than 300 µU/mL for longer than 8 hours and 21 hours, respectively. Insulin concentrations decreased with apparent first-order elimination half-lives of 13.0 hours and 6.0 hours. DISCUSSION:Following high-dose insulin therapy, insulin concentrations remained elevated for longer than expected based on normal pharmacokinetics in therapeutic dosing. Three previous cases reported insulin half-lives of between 2.2 hours and 18.7 hours. The current cases add to the existing data that insulin has a variable but prolonged half-life following high-dose insulin therapy. CONCLUSIONS:These findings suggest that patients are at prolonged risk of hypoglycemia following cessation of high-dose insulin infusions.
PMID: 37873673
ISSN: 1556-9519
CID: 5607942

A "madd"-ening confounding: fruit seeds mimicking enteral drug concealment by computed tomography

Wiener, Brian G; Burton, Rebecca L; Smith, Silas W; Su, Mark K; Biary, Rana; Tay, Ee Tein
OBJECTIVE/UNASSIGNED:To highlight the similarity between madd fruit seeds and enteral drug concealment ("body packing") on computed tomography when evaluated by Hounsfield Units. CASE REPORT/UNASSIGNED:) seeds, which can cause bezoar formation and intestinal obstruction. CONCLUSION/UNASSIGNED:Madd fruit seeds may appear similar to drug packets on computed tomography with similar Hounsfield Unit characteristics. History and clinical context are paramount to avoid misdiagnosis.
PMID: 37403697
ISSN: 1556-9519
CID: 5539132

Confirmed Fatal Colchicine Poisoning in an Adolescent with Blood and Bile Concentrations-Implications for GI Decontamination? [Case Report]

Trebach, Joshua; Boyd, Molly; Crane, Andres; DiSalvo, Phil; Biary, Rana; Hoffman, Robert S; Su, Mark K
INTRODUCTION:Colchicine is commonly used to treat diseases like acute gouty arthritis. However, colchicine has a very narrow therapeutic index, and ingestions of > 0.5mg/kg can be deadly. We report a fatal acute colchicine overdose in an adolescent. Blood and postmortem bile colchicine concentrations were obtained to better understand the degree of enterohepatic circulation of colchicine. CASE REPORT:A 13-year-old boy presented to the emergency department after acute colchicine poisoning. A single dose of activated charcoal was administered early but no other doses were attempted. Despite aggressive interventions such as exchange transfusion and veno-arterial extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (VA-ECMO), the patient died 8 days later. Postmortem histology was notable for centrilobular necrosis of the liver and a cardiac septal microinfarct. The patient's blood colchicine concentration on hospital days 1 (~30 hours post-ingestion), 5, and 7 was 12ng/mL, 11ng/mL, and 9.5ng/mL, respectively. A postmortem bile concentration obtained during autopsy was 27ng/mL. DISCUSSION:Humans produce approximately 600mL of bile daily. Assuming that activated charcoal would be able to adsorb 100% of biliary colchicine, using the bile concentration obtained above, only 0.0162mg of colchicine per day would be able to be adsorbed and eliminated by activated charcoal in this patient. CONCLUSION:Despite supportive care, activated charcoal, VA-ECMO, and exchange transfusion, modern medicine may not be enough to prevent death in severely poisoned colchicine patients. Although targeting enterohepatic circulation with activated charcoal to enhance elimination of colchicine sounds attractive, the patient's low postmortem bile concentration of colchicine suggests a limited role of activated charcoal in enhancing elimination of a consequential amount of colchicine.
PMCID:10293133
PMID: 37222938
ISSN: 1937-6995
CID: 5538262

Comment on: Are antimuscarinic effects common in hydroxyzine overdose? A cohort analysis of antimuscarinic effects in hydroxyzine and diphenhydramine poisoned patient [Comment]

Klein, Samantha S; Bloom, Joshua; Gnirke, Marlis; Howland, Mary Ann
PMID: 37535034
ISSN: 1556-9519
CID: 5594562

Incidence of rescue surgical airways after attempted orotracheal intubation in the emergency department: A National Emergency Airway Registry (NEAR) Study

Offenbacher, Joseph; Nikolla, Dhimitri A; Carlson, Jestin N; Smith, Silas W; Genes, Nicholas; Boatright, Dowin H; Brown, Calvin A
BACKGROUND:Cricothyrotomy is a critical technique for rescue of the failed airway in the emergency department (ED). Since the adoption of video laryngoscopy, the incidence of rescue surgical airways (those performed after at least one unsuccessful orotracheal or nasotracheal intubation attempt), and the circumstances where they are attempted, has not been characterized. OBJECTIVE:We report the incidence and indications for rescue surgical airways using a multicenter observational registry. METHODS:We performed a retrospective analysis of rescue surgical airways in subjects ≥14 years of age. We describe patient, clinician, airway management, and outcome variables. RESULTS:Of 19,071 subjects in NEAR, 17,720 (92.9%) were ≥14 years old with at least one initial orotracheal or nasotracheal intubation attempt, 49 received a rescue surgical airway attempt, an incidence of 2.8 cases per 1000 (0.28% [95% confidence interval 0.21 to 0.37]). The median number of airway attempts prior to rescue surgical airways was 2 (interquartile range 1, 2). Twenty-five were in trauma victims (51.0% [36.5 to 65.4]), with neck trauma being the most common traumatic indication (n = 7, 14.3% [6.4 to 27.9]). CONCLUSION:Rescue surgical airways occurred infrequently in the ED (0.28% [0.21 to 0.37]), with approximately half performed due to a trauma indication. These results may have implications for surgical airway skill acquisition, maintenance, and experience.
PMID: 36905882
ISSN: 1532-8171
CID: 5542042

Defining the roles of computed tomography and esophagogastroduodenoscopy in patients with caustic ingestions [Editorial]

Hoffman, Robert S
PMID: 37293898
ISSN: 1556-9519
CID: 5541332

Massive intentional enoxaparin overdose managed with minimal protamine: A single case report

de Olano, Jonathan; Howland, Mary Ann; Su, Mark K
DISCLAIMER/CONCLUSIONS:In an effort to expedite the publication of articles, AJHP is posting manuscripts online as soon as possible after acceptance. Accepted manuscripts have been peer-reviewed and copyedited, but are posted online before technical formatting and author proofing. These manuscripts are not the final version of record and will be replaced with the final article (formatted per AJHP style and proofed by the authors) at a later time. PURPOSE/OBJECTIVE:The case of a patient with a massive acute enoxaparin overdose managed with observation and minimal doses of protamine sulfate is reported. SUMMARY/CONCLUSIONS:Acute enoxaparin overdoses are uncommonly reported and management is widely variable. A 25-year-old man presented to the emergency department (ED) shortly after reporting that he had attempted suicide by injecting himself with 31 syringes of 80 mg of enoxaparin (a total of 2,480 mg) in the abdomen and other areas of his body. The patient also had self-inflicted superficial lacerations of the forearm. Due to concern over suspected compartment syndrome in the forearm, 25 mg of protamine was administered. Approximately 11 hours after reported enoxaparin self-injection, the patient's activated partial thromboplastin time (aPTT) was 206 seconds, prompting administration of an additional 50 mg of protamine. Three hours later, the aPTT had decreased to 79 seconds, then rose over several hours to 127 seconds before gradually declining to normal values. Protamine administration had no appreciable impact on anti-factor Xa activity. The patient did not require any blood products during the hospital admission. There were no further complications, and the patient was discharged to the inpatient psychiatry service on hospital day 8. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:The case highlights the role of protamine as a reversal agent in the management of low-molecular-weight heparin overdoses. The optimal dosing and efficacy of protamine for this indication needs further investigation.
PMID: 36786407
ISSN: 1535-2900
CID: 5432072

Comment on "Cardiovascular and Adverse Effects of Glucagon for the Management of Suspected Beta Blocker Toxicity: a Case Series" [Letter]

Gnirke, Marlis; Wiener, Brian G; Smith, Silas W
PMCID:10050248
PMID: 36867314
ISSN: 1937-6995
CID: 5448542