Elimination
Methods:
- gastric lavage / emesis - these are used to remove the drug from the stomach. They are generally, valuable in all cases of self-poisoning presenting within 4 hours of ingestion, except if the abused substance is corrosive - paraquat being a notable exception. Gastric lavage is usually reserved for adults; forced emesis, using syrup of ipecacuanha, for children. In drugs which delay gastric emptying - salicylates, opiates, tricyclics, or sustained release theophylline preparations - these methods may be useful much longer after ingestion.
- activated charcoal
- peritoneal dialysis - may be used in poisoning due to lithium, ethylene glycol, methanol and ethanol poisoning, and in situations where urinary alkalinisation is inappropriate, for example, because of renal failure
- haemodialysis - usually more effective than peritoneal dialysis
- haemoperfusion - entails passing the drug through a column of activated charcoal or resin to adsorbs the drug. It may be of value in severe poisoning from barbiturates or theophylline
- forced alkaline diuresis - urinary pH kept greater than 7.5 - mainly in salicylate and phenobarbitone poisoning
- forced acid diuresis - urinary pH kept less than 7.0 - mainly in amphetamine poisoning
Related pages
Create an account to add page annotations
Annotations allow you to add information to this page that would be handy to have on hand during a consultation. E.g. a website or number. This information will always show when you visit this page.