Toxic Ingestion Clinical Pathway — Emergency Department, ICU and Inpatient
Toxic Ingestion Clinical Pathway — Emergency Department, ICU and Inpatient
Decontamination
Most children do not require any GI decontamination.
- GI decontamination is most effective early in an exposure
- Ipecac is no longer recommended for any toxic ingestion
- Consult Poison Control Center to determine suitability and timing of decontamination
Topical Decontamination
- Indications
- Residual substances on skin and eyes
- Example Substances
- Laundry detergent packets, household cleaners, caustics
- Mechanism
- Removes substance in contact with skin, restores surface pH towards normal
- Copious eye irrigation
- Administration
- Copious irrigation with water sufficient in most cases
- Comments
- Risk of aspiration if irrigating near the mouth
Activated Charcoal
- Indication
- Many ingested pharmaceuticals and miscellaneous substances
- Especially if nonpolar, water-soluble, organic, and molecular weight ~100-1000
- Example Substances
- Digoxin
- Salicylates
- Phenothiazines
- Mechanism
- Decreases GI absorption by adsorption of substance to activated charcoal surface
- Administration
- Often single dose, though multiple doses may be recommended by Poison Control Center
- Give PO or NG
- Typical dose 1 g/kg, max 50 g
- Comments
- Not recommended/effective for certain substances
- Alcohols
- Volatile
- Hydrocarbons
- Metals
- Caustics
- Most effective if given within 1 hour of ingestion
- Consider intubation for administration given aspiration and emesis risk
Whole Bowel Irrigation
- Indications
- Substances not adsorbed by activated charcoal
- Delayed/extended-release formulations of highly toxic drugs
- Calcium channel blockers
- Beta blockers
- Bupropion
- Lithium
- Body packer/body packer syndrome
- Example Substances
- Iron, lithium, lead
- Many pharmaceutical drugs
- Bupropion, verapamil, metoprolol, lithium
- Ingested packets of cocaine, opioids
- Mechanism
- Eliminates substance from GI tract prior to absorption
- Administration
- High volume/rate administration of polyethylene glycol balanced electrolyte solution
- Give PO or NG until rectal effluent clear
- Comments
- Not routinely used or recommended in children
- Aspiration and emesis risk with administration
- Requires intact peristalsis
Gastric Lavage
- Indications
- Rarely used
- Consider early in presentation for life-threatening dose of high toxicity substance
- Example Substances
- Colchicine
- Calcium channel blocker
- Beta blocker
- Bupropion
- Mechanism
- Removes drug from stomach before gastric emptying
- Administration
- Comments
- Aspiration, emesis risk
- Risk of trauma to esophagus and stomach including potential perforation
- GI decontamination is most effective early in an exposure
- Ipecac is no longer recommended for any toxic ingestion
- Consult Poison Control Center to determine suitability and timing of decontamination
- Residual substances on skin and eyes
- Laundry detergent packets, household cleaners, caustics
- Removes substance in contact with skin, restores surface pH towards normal
- Copious eye irrigation
- Copious irrigation with water sufficient in most cases
- Risk of aspiration if irrigating near the mouth
- Many ingested pharmaceuticals and miscellaneous substances
- Especially if nonpolar, water-soluble, organic, and molecular weight ~100-1000
- Digoxin
- Salicylates
- Phenothiazines
- Decreases GI absorption by adsorption of substance to activated charcoal surface
- Often single dose, though multiple doses may be recommended by Poison Control Center
- Give PO or NG
- Typical dose 1 g/kg, max 50 g
- Not recommended/effective for certain substances
- Alcohols
- Volatile
- Hydrocarbons
- Metals
- Caustics
- Most effective if given within 1 hour of ingestion
- Consider intubation for administration given aspiration and emesis risk
- Substances not adsorbed by activated charcoal
- Delayed/extended-release formulations of highly toxic drugs
- Calcium channel blockers
- Beta blockers
- Bupropion
- Lithium
- Body packer/body packer syndrome
- Iron, lithium, lead
- Many pharmaceutical drugs
- Bupropion, verapamil, metoprolol, lithium
- Ingested packets of cocaine, opioids
- Eliminates substance from GI tract prior to absorption
- High volume/rate administration of polyethylene glycol balanced electrolyte solution
- Give PO or NG until rectal effluent clear
- Not routinely used or recommended in children
- Aspiration and emesis risk with administration
- Requires intact peristalsis
- Rarely used
- Consider early in presentation for life-threatening dose of high toxicity substance
- Colchicine
- Calcium channel blocker
- Beta blocker
- Bupropion
- Removes drug from stomach before gastric emptying
- Aspiration, emesis risk
- Risk of trauma to esophagus and stomach including potential perforation