Who gets digoxin toxicity?
- Significant interactions with P450 pathway can lead to accumulation. A thorough drug history including recent discontinuations is important.
- Toxicity can occur in patients on stable doses who develop renal failure because of accumulation
- Toxicity is increased in older patients and those with hypokalemia, hypernatremia, hypomagnesemia, hypercalcemia
Symptoms:
- Blurred vision, coloured haloes
- Confusion, fatigue, delerium, hallucinosis
- anorexia, nausea, vomitting, diarrhea, abdominal pain
ECG/Conduction abnormalities:
- Bradycardia
- Ventricular ectopy (PVCs, bigeminy, small runs of VT)
- AV block - 1st, 2nd, 3rd degree
- atrial tachcardias with 2:1, 3:2, 4:1, 6:1 or sometimes variable AV block
- Accelerated Junctional Rhythms (particularly with HR >60)
- VT/VF
Levels (measure 6-12h post last dose):
Treatment:
- Supportive care
- Symptomatic bradycardias usually respond to atropine
- Attempt to avoid pacing if possible (irritible myocardium)
- Attempt to avoid beta-agonists (irritible myocardium)
- Treat hypokalemia and hypomagnesemia
- Cautious treatment of hyperkalemia -- avoid calcium salts
"Digibind" - F(ab) fragments of engineered antibodies designed to bind to drug. For use in:
- Hemodynamically unstable
- Life threatening arrythmia
- Digoxin toxic rhytym with elevated digoxin level
- "Severe bradycardia"
- K+ >5 in acute ingestion
- dig level greater than 13 mmol/L or ingestion more than 10mg
Digibind will make further measurements of dig level inaccurate for >1 week.
Ensure you dose it appropriately --> digoxin level x weight /100 = approximate # of vials.
No comments:
Post a Comment