- Bradycardia & hypotension (most common).
- Myocardial depression & cardiogenic shock (severe overdoses).
- Ventricular dysrhythmias (Common with propranolol & acebutolol).
- Others (mental status change, seizure, hypoglycemia, & bronchospasm).
- Co-ingestions of CCB, TCA, & neuroleptics, increases mortality.
- Mostly symptomatic < 2 hrs following ingestion, & nearly all develop symptoms < 6 hrs.
- Delayed toxicity up to 24 hrs after ingestion (Sustained release meds: metoprolol succinate & sotalol).
- Sotalol prolongs the QTc interval & can lead to Torsades de Pointes.
- Carvedilol (associated with edema & toxic epidermal necrolysis).
- IV lipid emulsion therapy for poisoning involving lipophilic medications (eg, propranolol, metoprolol, labetalol).
January 31, 2024
Beta-Blocker Overdose/toxicity
January 18, 2024
QT/QTc- Interval
- Start of Q-wave to end of the T-wave (time of ventricular depolarization + repolarization).
- Life threatening risk of prolonged QTc >500ms = Torsades de pointes (TdP).
- Prolonged QT/QTc interval may be a clue to electrolyte disturbances (hypocalcemia or hypokalemia), drug effects (quinidine, procainamide, amiodarone, or sotalol), or myocardial ischemia (usually with prominent T wave inversions).
- Shortened QT intervals are seen with hypercalcemia and digitalis effect.
- Each 10-millisecond increase in QTc contributes approx a 5% to 7% additional increase in risk for TdP.
- QTc of 540 milliseconds has a 63% to 97% higher risk of developing TdP than a patient with QTc of 440 milliseconds.
- Find a lead with the tallest T wave and count the little boxes from the start of the QRS complex to the point where the T wave comes back down to the isoelectric line.
- Multiply the number of little boxes by 0.04 seconds.
- Example if you counted 8 boxes then QT interval is 8 x 0.04 = 0.32 seconds (320 milliseconds).
- QT interval should be less than half the preceding R-R interval (Works for regular rates between 65-90).
- Bazett formula, QTc = QT / √RR.
- Fridericia formula (QTc = QT / RR1/3)
- Hodges [QTc = QT + 0.00175 x (HR - 60)]
- Framingham linear regression analysis {QTc = QT + 0.154 x (1 - RR)}
- Karjalainen et al. [QT nomogram]
- Rautaharju formula, QTc = QT x (120 + HR) / 180
January 15, 2024
Rhabdomyolysis
- Rhabdomyolysis is a clinical syndrome that comprises destruction of skeletal muscle with outflow of intracellular muscle content into the bloodstream.
- The systemic complications associated with rhabdomyolysis result from the leakage of muscle intracellular components into the bloodstream.
- Elevated Creatine kinase (CK) hallmark of rhabdomyolysis.
- Defined based on CK values five times above the upper limit of normal.
- Half-life of CK is 1.5 days; elevated<12hrs, peaks in 3 days, & normalizes in 5 days.
- Myoglobin half-life of 2-3 hrs & rapidly excreted by kidneys.
- Rapid & unpredictable metabolism makes myoglobin less useful marker of muscle injury.
- Antibiotics associated with rhabdomyolysis: Daptomycin, macrolides, trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole, linezolid, fluoroquinolones, and cefdinir.
- Rhabdomyolysis is associated with hyperkalemia, hypocalcemia, hyperuricemia, and hyperphosphatemia.
Management includes appropriate hydration to improve end-organ perfusion, close monitoring of urine output, correction of electrolyte abnormalities, identification of complications like compartment syndrome, and disseminated intravascular coagulation.
January 13, 2024
Evaluation of Leukocytosis:
Evaluation of Leukocytosis:
Mature WBC:
- 80-90% remain in storage in bone marrow.
- 2% to 3% circulate freely in peripheral blood;
- The rest stay deposited along the margins of blood vessel walls or in the spleen
- Life span: 2- 16 days (depending on cell type in the peripheral circulation).
LEUCOCYTOSIS
WBC > 11,000 per mm3 [11.0 × 109 per L]
Reactive: Typically, 11,000 to 30,000 per mm3.
Leukemoid reaction: approx. 50,000-100,000 per
(e.g., C difficile infection, sepsis, organ rejection, or solid tumors.
Leukemias or myeloproliferative disorders: > 100,000 per mm3.
Paradoxical neutropenia: typhoid fever, rickettsia infections, brucellosis, & dengue.
Neutrophil bands
- Immature neutrophils
- Morphologically: absence of complete separation of nuclear lobes with a visible distinction between chromatin & parachromatin in the narrowest segment of the nucleus often flagged on 5-part automated differential & confirmed by PBS.
Leukemoid Reaction:
Transient increase in WBC count defined as significant neutrophilia >50x10^9/L in the absence of a myeloproliferative neoplasm.
Mature neutrophils seen in a leukemoid reaction.
Etiology: sepsis, organ rejection, solid tumors, and bacterial infections.
D/D leukemia: increases in blast cells (precursor cells to leukocytes) and immature WBCs,
Improves after treating the underlying cause.
January 06, 2024
Hyponatremia
January 03, 2024
Para-neoplastic dermatoses (PD)
Para-neoplastic dermatoses (PD):
- Heterogeneous, rare, acquired diseases characterized by the presence of an underlying neoplasia.
- Usually develop simultaneously with the underlying cancer, but they can also occur before or after the development of the neoplasia.
- Their recognition can lead to a prompt cancer detection and to an early start of the appropriate therapy.
December 25, 2023
Diabetic Ketoacidosis (DKA)
- Serum glucose >250 mg/dL
- Arterial pH <7.3
- Serum bicarbonate <18 mEq/L
- At least moderate ketonuria or ketonemia.
Infection is a very common trigger for DKA in patients who have new-onset diabetes and previously established diabetes. If there is any suspicion of infection, antibiotics should be administered promptly.
2.6% to 3.2% of DKA admissions are Euglycemic Diabetic ketoacidosis (EDKA).
Pregnancy is a risk factor for EDKA because of the physiologic state of hypoinsulinemia and increased starvation.
Alcoholic ketoacidosis may have a similar presentation to EDKA, with anorexia, vomiting, dyspnea, and significant anion gap metabolic acidosis and ketonemia.
Common, early signs of ketoacidosis include nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, and hyperventilation.
Patients with DKA usually present with a serum anion gap greater than 20 mEq/L (normal 3 to 10 mEq/L). However, the increase in anion gap is variable, being determined by several factors: the rate and duration of ketoacid production, the rate of metabolism of the ketoacids and their loss in the urine, and the volume of distribution of the ketoacid anions.
Continue insulin infusion until ketoacidosis is resolved, serum glucose is below 200 mg/dL, and subcutaneous insulin is begun. Treatment with IV fluid resuscitation should continue until the anion gap closes and acidosis has resolved.
May 10, 2023
Pemphigus
IgA
pemphigus does not present with oral mucosa blisters. Direct and indirect
immunofluorescence can both help to differentiate PV from IgA pemphigus.
Pemphigus
foliaceus does not affect the oral mucosa and is less common than PV.
Paraneoplastic
pemphigus presents with mucocutaneous vesicles and bullae and can be
differentiated from PV using indirect immunofluorescence and immunoblot.