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Basics

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DESCRIPTION

A syndrome of tachycardia, mydriasis, dry mucous membranes, decreased bowel sounds, urinary retention, hallucinations and warm, dry, and flushed skin caused by a blockade of the acetylcholine receptors.

PATHOPHYSIOLOGY


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Diagnosis

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DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS

Further information on each poison is available in SECTION IV, CHEMICAL AND BIOLOGICAL AGENTS.

Toxicologic Causes

Other Compounds that Produce Similar Clinical Effects

SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS

Vital Signs

HEENT

Dermatologic

Cardiovascular

Pulmonary

Bronchodilation may occur as a result of therapeutic use of antimuscarinic agents but is not a reliable marker of toxicity.

Gastrointestinal

Musculoskeletal

Psychomotor agitation may produce rhabdomyolysis.

Neurologic

Genitourinary

Urinary retention with bladder distension is common.

Psychiatric/Psychological

Toxic psychosis with hallucinations is well documented.

PROCEDURES AND LABORATORY TESTS

Essential Tests

Testing may not be needed in minimally symptomatic patients.

Recommended Tests


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Treatment

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DIRECTING PATIENT COURSE

The health-care provider should call the poison control center when:

DECONTAMINATION

Out of Hospital

Ipecac should be administered to induce emesis within 1 hour of ingestion for an alert pediatric or adult patient if health-care evaluation will be delayed.

In Hospital

ANTIDOTES

Antidotes should be administered for altered mental status: oxygen, thiamine, glucose, and naloxone.

Physostigmine

Physostigmine may be administered as a diagnostic agent to distinguish altered mental status due to anticholinergic toxicity from other causes of agitation and hallucination. A positive response to this test may obviate the need for a head CT and lumbar puncture for evaluation of altered mental status.

Contraindications

Method of Administration

Potential Adverse Effects

ADJUNCTIVE TREATMENT


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FollowUp

EXPECTED COURSE AND PROGNOSIS

Pitfalls

Miscellaneous

ICD-9-CM 971.1

Poisoning by drugs primarily affecting the autonomic nervous system: parasympatholytics (anticholinergics and antimuscarinics) and spasmotics.

See Also: SECTION II, Hypertension, Hypotension, and Tachycardia chapters; SECTION III, Physostigmine chapter; and SECTION IV, Anticholinergic Compounds and Plants—Anticholinergic chapters.

RECOMMENDED READING

Ellenhorn MJ. Antimuscarinic drugs. In: Medical toxicology: diagnosis and treatment of human poisoning. Baltimore: Williams & Wilkins, 1997:840-861.

Author: Edwin K. Kuffner

Reviewer: Richard C. Dart