Treatment of severe tricyclic antidepressant overdose with extracorporeal sorbent detoxification
2002
Abstract Tricyclic overdose can be a medical emergency, and therapy with intravenous bicarbonate is not always successful in preventing cardiac toxicity or coma. Mortality in patients developing these complications is from 1% to 15%. Extracorporeal detoxification with sorbents has been used in treatment of patients with very high drug levels and declining clinical condition. Ten patients with serious drug overdose caused by tricyclics failed to respond quickly to standard therapy and were in stage 3-4 encephalopathy. Nine of these patients were on respirator support, 5 had hypotension, and 6 had QRS widening. Average level was 1,423 μg/L at presentation. Enteral activated charcoal and intravenous (IV) bicarbonate were initiated in the emergency room. The patients were treated for 3 to 4 hours with the Liver Dialysis Unit, a hemodiabsorption device using a cellulosic plate dialyzer and sorbent suspension as dialysate. Inflow and outflow blood levels indicated that the hemodetoxifier removed modest amounts of the tricyclics, metabolites, and other consumed drugs. The clinical improvement of the patients was dramatic, with patients reaching stage 0 or 1 encephalopathy during the treatment. Ventilator support was removed at the end of treatment for 3 patients who had not already developed pneumonia, and for others was prolonged up to 48 hours because of pneumonia, rather than mental status. Average length of stay in the intensive care unit (ICU) was 4.8 days (range 1 to 7 days). None of the patients died despite their high risk for ventricular arrhythmias, seizures, and death. Clinical improvement may have been attributable to removal of free drug from the blood or to removal of drug metabolites. © 2002 by the National Kidney Foundation, Inc.
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