You are polishing off the sweet remains of a fruitful Halloween weekend when the paramedics burst through the door with a very sick looking patient. You throw away your candy wrappers and rush to the stretcher where they present you with a 58 year-old ill-appearing obese male who’s been in sub-acute rehab after a knee replacement. EMS tells you he had been found altered with episodes of vomiting, diarrhea, erratic behavior and movements.
You ask for the admission history and are handed over tomb of papers.
A-FIB, CHF, COPD, BIPOLAR, ETOH ABUSE, PEPTIC ULCER DISEASE, CAD w/ stents…
A medication list that spans the page…
As your mind is flooded with a large differential of CVA, sepsis, C-diff colitis, ETOH withdrawal-you begin to wish you could go back to eating twizzlers and kit-kats.
Your wise attending calmly walks over and reminds you can order one test that can pull together these disparate symptoms.
What is likely going on in this patient?
How does this affect the presentation of the patient?
Acute toxicity: This is typically due to acute intentional overdoses in naive patients – there is less time for drug to diffuse into CNS. GI symptoms, as lithium is an irritant, include nausea, vomiting, diarrhea and generalized abdominal pain. Cardiac abnormalities include bradycardia, hypotension and ventricular dysrhythmias.
Chronic toxicity: This may occur due to a change in lithium dosage or decreased renal clearance. The earlier effects are neurologic and include tremors, muscle fasciculation, clonus, choreoathetosis (irregular twisting contractions), ataxia, dysarthria, agitation, lethargy and seizure. These signs and symptoms can even occur at therapeutic levels.
Acute on Chronic toxicity: This may be seen in patients undergoing treatment with lithium who ingest an additional amount. They will exhibit both GI and neurologic symptoms.
What tests should you order?
ECG – prolonged QTc and diffuse T-wave inversions
TSH/T4 – may see lithium-induced hypothyroidism
BUN/crn – the kidneys are the only way lithium is eliminated!
CBC – basic labwork; of note lithium may cause elevated white count
Na, Ca – may cause nephrogenic diabetes insipidus and hyperparathyroidism
How should you manage the patient?
What is the disposition?
References:
Schneider S.,Cobaugh D. and B. Kessler. “Chapter 181. Lithium.”Tintinalli’s Emergency Medicine: A Comprehensive Study Guide, 8e. Eds. Judith E. Tintinalli, et al. New York, NY: McGraw-Hill, 2015. n. pag. AccessMedicine.Web. 8 Nov. 2016.
awong
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