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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
- Anticholinergic compounds competitively block acetylcholine at the postsynaptic muscarinic acetylcholine receptor. The result is decreased stimulation of the muscarinic acetylcholine receptor.
- Anticholinergic compounds do not have an effect on the postsynaptic nicotinic acetylcholine receptor.
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- Numerous agents antagonize the effects of acetylcholine at the postsynaptic muscarinic receptor; therefore, medication and occupational histories are important in determining the cause of this syndrome.
- Most patients will not exhibit all the classic anticholinergic symptoms simultaneously. Some agents may produce more subtle clinical syndromes in which some signs or symptoms are more prominent than others.
- Antimuscarinic effects may be remembered as "mad as a hatter" (altered mental status, hallucinations), "hot as hell" (hyperthermia), "dry as a bone" (dry mucous membranes), "blind as a bat" (mydriasis, blurred vision), "red as a beet" (flushed skin), and "seizing like a squirrel" (seizures).
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
Further information on each poison is available in SECTION IV, CHEMICAL AND BIOLOGICAL AGENTS.
Toxicologic Causes
- Antihistamines (most commonly diphenhydramine)
- Phenothiazines
- Anticholinergic plants
- Cyclic antidepressants
- Antispasmodic agents (clidinium, dicyclomine, flavoxate, hyoscine, oxybutynin, propantheline, scopolamine)
- Mucous membrane drying agents (glycopyrrolate)
- Mydriatic agents (atropine, cyclopentolate, homatropine, tropicamide)
- Bronchodilator agents (ipratropium)
- Skeletal muscle relaxants (cyclobenzaprine, orphenadrine)
- Anti-parkinsonian medications (benztropine, biperiden)
Other Compounds that Produce Similar Clinical Effects
- Sympathomimetic amines may produce tachycardia, dry mucous membranes, mydriasis, hyperthermia, delirium, and seizures. They generally cause diaphoresis, and bowel sounds are usually present.
- Hallucinogenic drugs or mushrooms may cause delirium and mydriasis.
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
Vital Signs
- Tachycardia is common due to the antimuscarinic blockade of the vagus nerve. Its absence should question the diagnosis of anticholinergic toxicity.
- Hyperthermia is usually mild unless environmental factors exacerbate the effect.
- Hypertension and tachypnea may be caused by psychomotor agitation.
HEENT
- Mydriasis and dry mucous membranes are common. Blurred vision occurs as a result of mydriasis.
- Isolated mydriasis and anisocoria have occurred after instillation of an ophthalmic mydriatic or other anticholinergic agent into one eye.
- Ophthalmic instillation can produce systemic anticholinergic toxicity.
Dermatologic
- Warm, dry, and flushed skin is common.
- Dry axillae in an agitated patient with psychomotor agitation suggests anticholinergic effects or severe dehydration.
Cardiovascular
- Tachycardia is common due to antimuscarinic effects that block vagal stimulation of the sinoatrial node.
- Hypertension may be related to psychomotor agitation.
- Hypotension can occur following seizures and may be associated with hypovolemia. Life-threatening dysrhythmias are rare.
Pulmonary
Bronchodilation may occur as a result of therapeutic use of antimuscarinic agents but is not a reliable marker of toxicity.
Gastrointestinal
- Ileus and decreased bowel sounds are common.
- Constipation is a common side effect of medications with anticholinergic effects.
Musculoskeletal
Psychomotor agitation may produce rhabdomyolysis.
Neurologic
- Agitation with altered mental status is common. Toxic psychosis with anxiety, paranoia, and hallucinations is well documented.
- CNS depression with drowsiness and lethargy progressing to coma is less common.
- Seizures may occur.
- Dystonic reactions and movement disorders also have been reported.
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
- Serum electrolytes, BUN, creatinine to assess dehydration and potential renal injury from myoglobin.
- Creatine kinase may be elevated if rhabdomyolysis occurs.
- Urinalysis to assess dehydration or myoglobin-induced renal injury.
- ECG, serum acetaminophen and aspirin levels, urine toxicology screen to detect occult overdose. Sinus tachycardia is common. Malignant dysrhythmia is rare.
- Lumbar puncture, bacterial cultures, head CT, and other tests as indicated to assess altered mental status of unknown etiology.
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- In the agitated patient, focus treatment on control of agitation and protection from self-harm. In the patient with CNS depression, focus treatment on airway management.
- Supportive care should be provided while evaluating source of poisoning.
- Dosage and time of exposure should be determined for all substances involved.
DIRECTING PATIENT COURSE
The health-care provider should call the poison control center when:
- the source of anticholinergic effects is unclear.
- coingestant, drug interaction, or underlying disease presents an unusual problem.
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
- Ipecac should be administered to induce emesis within 1 hour of ingestion for the alert patient who is too small to have effective gastric lavage.
- Gastric lavage should be performed in pediatric (tube size 24-32 French) or adult (tube size 36-42 French) patients for large ingestion presenting within 1 hour of ingestion or if serious effects are present. Lavage may be reasonable even 4 to 6 hours after ingestion due to the gastrointestinal slowing effects of anticholinergic agents.
- One dose of activated charcoal (1-2 g/kg) should be administered without a cathartic if a substantial ingestion has occurred within the previous few hours.
- Irrigate eyes, skin, and mucous membranes with copious amounts of water following exposure to those areas.
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
- Known allergy to cholinergic agonist or sulfites
- Tricyclic antidepressant overdose, or ECG findings suggestive of tricyclic antidepressant overdose (QRS widening, R wave in ECG lead aVR)
- History of asthma, heart disease, diabetes, seizure disorder, inflammation of iris or ciliary body
Method of Administration
- Place the patient on a cardiac monitor and have atropine available at the bedside.
- Adult dose is 0.5 to 2.0 mg slow push intravenously over 5 minutes. Repeat dose intravenously once after 5 to 10 minutes if needed.
- Pediatric dose is 0.02 mg/kg up to 2.0 mg slow push intravenously over 5 minutes. Repeat dose intravenously once after 5 to 10 minutes if needed.
Potential Adverse Effects
- Adverse effects are more common with larger doses and faster rates of administration.
- Muscarinic effects are nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, sweating, bronchorrhea, bradycardia, hypotension. Cardiac dysrhythmia may occur.
- Nicotinic effects (weakness, fasciculation) also may occur.
- Seizures may occur.
ADJUNCTIVE TREATMENT
- Treat psychomotor agitation with benzodiazepines. Tachycardia and hyperthermia may improve with both benzodiazepines and intravenous hydration.
- Support blood pressure and perfusion as clinically indicated.
- Hypertension usually resolves with sedation and rarely requires specific treatment.
Section Outline:
ICD-9-CM 971.1Poisoning 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 PlantsAnticholinergic 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