| Literature DB >> 25202457 |
Erin N Frazee1, Sarah J Lee2, Ejaaz A Kalimullah3, Heather A Personett1, Darlene R Nelson2.
Abstract
Introduction. In cardiovascular collapse from diltiazem poisoning, extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) may offer circulatory support sufficient to preserve endogenous hepatic drug clearance. Little is known about patient outcomes and diltiazem toxicokinetics in this setting. Case Report. A 36-year-old woman with a history of myocardial bridging syndrome presented with chest pain for which she self-medicated with 2.4 g of sustained release diltiazem over the course of 8 hours. Hemodynamics and mentation were satisfactory on presentation, but precipitously deteriorated after ICU transfer. She was given fluids, calcium, vasopressors, glucagon, high-dose insulin, and lipid emulsion. Due to circulatory collapse and multiorgan failure including ischemic hepatopathy, she underwent transvenous pacing and emergent initiation of venoarterial ECMO. The peak diltiazem level was 13150 ng/mL (normal 100-200 ng/mL) and it remained elevated at 6340 ng/mL at hour 90. Unfortunately, the patient developed multiple complications which resulted in her death on ICU day 9. Conclusion. This case describes the unsuccessful use of ECMO for diltiazem intoxication. Although past reports suggest that support with ECMO may facilitate endogenous diltiazem clearance, it may be dependent on preserved hepatic function at the time of cannulation, a factor not present in this case.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25202457 PMCID: PMC4150522 DOI: 10.1155/2014/969578
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Crit Care ISSN: 2090-6420
Vital signs and laboratory measures and events during the admission.
| Hours and days after ingestion | Vitals signs and | Events and interventions | Diltiazem level (ng/mL) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 8 hours (presentation) | Vitals: HR 77 bpm, BP 102/56 mmHg | Calcium, glucagon, high-dose insulin, fluids, lipid emulsion, and vasopressors started | — |
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| 19 hours | Vitals: HR 78 bpm, supported BP 112/38 mmHg (MAP 53) | PAC placed, transvenously paced at 80 bpm due to interval development of prolonged sinus pauses; methylene blue attempted; CVVH begun | — |
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| 23 hours | — | — | 1140 |
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| 25 hours | Immediately before ECMO cannulation: | V-A ECMO cannulation, total circuit flow 4.8–5.1 L/min (ECMO CI 2.9–3.1 L/min/m2) | — |
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| 39 hours | — | — | 9450 |
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| 44 hours | — | — | 7120 |
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| 51 hours | Hemodynamics: HR 100 (paced; asystolic when pacemaker is off), total ECMO circuit flow 4.6 L/min (ECMO CI 2.7 L/min/m2) | Abdominal compartment syndrome, to operating room for exploration, evacuation of ascites, and temporary closure | 13150 |
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| 71 hours | Labs: lactate 15.4 mmol/L; potassium 8.1 mmol/L; aPTT 63 seconds (heparinized), INR 2.3 | Persistent elevation in potassium and lactate with increasing abdominal distension; prompted exploration where ischemic small bowel and colon were found along with a large retroperitoneal hematoma; resected and left in discontinuity | 2020 |
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| 90 hours | — | Developed bilateral lower-extremity compartment syndrome requiring fasciotomies | 6340 |
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| Day 5 | — | Underwent abdominal reexploration with creation of an end ileostomy and 3 mucous fistulae | — |
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| Day 7 | — | Regained sinus rhythm and downtitrated vasopressors; unable to wean from ECMO | — |
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| Day 8 | — | Developed a GI bleed in the setting of refractory thrombocytopenia, anticoagulation for ECMO, and autoanticoagulation from acute liver injury | — |
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| Day 9 | — | Transitioned to comfort cares and died | — |
HR: heart rate; BP: blood pressure, MAP: mean arterial pressure; PAC: pulmonary artery catheter; CI: cardiac index; SVRi: systemic vascular resistance index; ABG: arterial blood gas; CVVH: continuous venovenous hemofiltration; V-A ECMO: venoarterial extracorporeal membrane oxygenation; AST: aspartate aminotransferase; INR: international normalized ratio; LV EF: left ventricular ejection fraction.
Figure 1Diltiazem serum concentrations and concurrent interventions during ICU course according to suspected time from ingestion based on patient self-report.