Traditional
therapies for beta-blockers or calcium channel blocker toxicity are:
Glucagon, Calcium, Atropine and Vasopressors.
Glucagon, Calcium, Atropine and Vasopressors.
What I
learned is that now high-dose insulin therapy has emerged as a preferred
treatment of cardiogenic shock induced by calcium channel blockers or beta
blockers. When used at doses 10 times that of the normal antidiabetic dose,
insulin has positive inotropic effects even in the presence of beta-blocker or
calcium channel blocker toxicity. What insulin dose at these high doses is
improve hemodynamic stability and improve response to pressors. This takes
almost 30 min to take effect.
There
is a toxicology guidelines for this listed below: Consensus recommendations for the management of calcium
channel blocker poisoning in adults. There is a linear dose-response curve where
increasing doses of insulin produce increasing positive hemodynamic effects. Goals for treatment can be a heart rate
of at least 50 beats per minute and a systolic blood pressure of at least 100
mmHg. Obviously, one has to give dextrose to combat the severe hypoglycemia
that might result of this and monitor K and phos levels s well.
Interestingly,
this is being used commonly
in beta blocker toxicity as well. In one large study
looking at using high dose insulin in beta blocker and CCB toxicity, median
insulin bolus was 1U/kg and peak infusion was 8 Units/kg/h. Interestingly and expectedly, hypokalemia occurred
in close to 30% of patients and hypoglycemia in 30% of patients.
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