Theophylline toxicity Flashcards

1
Q

Theophylline is derived from

A

methylxanthines alkaloids

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2
Q

is used widely for the treatment of

A

asthma

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3
Q

most commonly is used orally in

A

sustained-release preparations

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4
Q

Mode of toxicity

A

Theophylline has a narrow therapeutic margin (therapeutic dose=10-20 µg/ml).

Mode of theophylline toxicity may be:
Intentional.
Dosing errors: (serum level monitoring during treatment is necessary).

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5
Q

Dosing errors include:

A
  • Miscalculation of the dose.
  • Change in the frequency of administration.
  • Conditions that reduce theophylline clearance:
  • Drug interaction with enzyme inhibitors, e.g. erythromycin, cimetidine.
  • Liver cirrhosis and CHF.
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6
Q

Mechanism of action

A

Three primary mechanisms have been postulated:
1-Antagonizing the activity of adenosine (adenosine causes constriction of respiratory smooth muscles).
2-Catecholamine release (epinephrine, norepinephrine)
3-Inhibit the activity of the enzyme phosphodiesterase which is responsible for the metabolism of cAMP. As the B-receptors are stimulated, the level of cAMP increase intracellularly and persist

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7
Q

Clinical presentation of acute toxicity

A

I- GIT
Nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, and may be upper GI bleeding.

II- CNS (due to loss of adenosine anticonvulsant activity)
Agitation, tremors.
Respiratory center stimulation leading to hyperventilation and respiratory alkalosis.

Generalized seizures are the most concerning because they are associated with increased mortality.

Prolonged seizures can contribute to rhabdomyolysis.

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8
Q

Clinical presentation of acute toxicity cont.

A

III- Cardiovascular (due to excessive catecholamine stimulation of the myocardium and aggravated by electrolyte and acid base disturbance).

Tachydysrhythmias:
Sinus tachycardia is the most common, all other types of tachydysrhythmias may be present
Ventricular dysrhythmias as ventricular fibrillation and cardiac arrest may occur.
Hypotension. (B2 effect and worsened by volume depletion).
IV- Metabolic (due to theophylline-induced increase in catecholamine release).

Hypokalemia because of intracellular shift of K+ (B2 adrenergic receptor effect).
Hypomagnesemia (CA stimulation, renal wasting, vomiting)
Metabolic acidosis. (lactic acidosis from convulsion, hypotension)
Hyperglycemia

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9
Q

Investigations

A

*Serum theophylline level: (therapeutic range = 10-20 µg/ml).
*Serum electrolytes, especially K+ level.
*Serum glucose.
*ABG may show
1-Respiratory alkalosis (early)
2-Metabolic acidosis.
*ECG, cardiac monitor.
*Baseline INR, PTT, platelets (should be documented in case that hemodialysis drug removal becomes necessary).

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10
Q

Treatment

A

I- Emergency measures (ABCD).
II- Elimination
GL. It may be delayed in case of SR preparations.
MDAC decreases serum theophylline.
Whole-bowel irrigation ( in cases of SR preparations)
Hemodialysis/hemoperfusion:
Indications:
Peak serum level >90 µg/ml at any time.
Peak serum level >40 µg/ml with clinical manifestations of severe toxicity: seizures, ventricular dysrhythmias, or hypotension unresponsive to fluids.

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11
Q

Treatment of dysrhythmias

A

Supraventricular tachycardia: adenosine

Ventricular dysrhythmias: lidocaine

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12
Q

Hypotension

A
  • IV fluids.
  • Phenylephrine (vasopressor with alpha receptor activity).
  • Non-selective beta-blockers, e.g. propranolol (caution in asthmatic patients).
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13
Q

Seizures

A
  • IV benzodiazepine.
  • Phenobarbital
  • General anesthesia if no response to phenobarbital
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14
Q

Hypokalemia

A

it must not be aggressively treated because redistribution of K+ occurs with decrease of theophylline level.

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15
Q

Vomiting must be aggressively controlled with:

A

Metoclopramide

Serotonin antagonists, e.g. ondansetron

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