Organophosphate Poisoning: Symptoms and Management
Clinical Presentation
Organophosphate poisoning produces a characteristic toxidrome from acetylcholinesterase inhibition, resulting in accumulation of acetylcholine at synapses and overstimulation of both muscarinic and nicotinic receptors. 1, 2
Muscarinic Symptoms (SLUDGE Syndrome)
- Salivation, Lacrimation, Urination, Defecation, Gastric cramps, and Emesis are the classic muscarinic manifestations 2
- Bronchorrhea and bronchospasm are life-threatening respiratory manifestations requiring immediate intervention 1, 3
- Miosis (pinpoint pupils) is frequently present and nearly pathognomonic when found with other symptoms 4
- Bradycardia occurs from cardiac muscarinic receptor stimulation 1
Nicotinic Symptoms
- Muscle fasciculations and twitching throughout the body are prominent early signs 5, 2
- Muscle weakness can progress to respiratory muscle paralysis 1
- Tachycardia may paradoxically occur from nicotinic stimulation at sympathetic ganglia 1
Central Nervous System Effects
- Altered mental status ranging from confusion to coma 5, 2
- Seizures and convulsions require immediate benzodiazepine therapy 1, 4
- Respiratory depression from central respiratory center involvement 3
- Dim vision was reported in healthcare workers with secondary exposure 6
Cardiovascular Manifestations
- QT prolongation can occur and predispose to ventricular arrhythmias 7
- Hypotension may develop in severe cases 5
Time-Based Classification of Symptoms
Acute Phase (Within 24 Hours)
- Most symptoms occur within minutes to hours following acute exposure 2
- Respiratory failure is the most troublesome and life-threatening complication 5
- Aspiration pneumonia from excessive secretions and altered mental status 5
Delayed Manifestations (24 Hours to 2 Weeks)
- Intermediate syndrome occurs in approximately 19% of patients, manifesting as delayed muscle weakness affecting respiratory muscles, neck flexors, and proximal limbs 1, 5
- This can occur as late as 4 days after acute exposure, even after initial improvement 1
Late Complications (Beyond 2 Weeks)
- Organophosphate-induced delayed polyneuropathy may develop 2
- Myonecrosis, rhabdomyolysis, and renal damage from calcium overload in skeletal muscle 1
Critical Management Algorithm
Immediate Actions (First 5 Minutes)
1. Personal Protection and Decontamination
- Healthcare providers must use personal protective equipment before patient contact, as organophosphates are prone to off-gassing and have secondarily injured multiple healthcare workers 6, 1
- Remove all contaminated clothing immediately and perform copious irrigation with soap and water for dermal exposure 1, 3
2. Airway, Breathing, Circulation
- Secure airway immediately in patients with respiratory failure, depressed consciousness, or inability to protect airway 1, 5
- Early endotracheal intubation is recommended for life-threatening poisoning, with observational data suggesting better outcomes 1
- Avoid succinylcholine and mivacurium as these neuromuscular blockers are metabolized by cholinesterase and are contraindicated 1, 3
Antidote Administration
3. Atropine - First-Line Therapy
- Administer atropine 1-2 mg IV immediately for adults (0.02 mg/kg for children, minimum 0.1 mg, maximum single dose 0.5 mg) 1, 3
- Double the dose every 5 minutes until bronchorrhea, bronchospasm, and bradycardia resolve 1, 3
- Do not give atropine in the presence of significant hypoxia due to risk of ventricular fibrillation; improve oxygenation first 3
- Atropine-induced tachycardia is NOT a contraindication to continued administration—the therapeutic endpoint is control of life-threatening muscarinic symptoms, not heart rate 1
- Maintain atropinization for at least 48 hours until depressed cholinesterase activity reverses 3
4. Pralidoxime (2-PAM) - Oxime Therapy
- Administer pralidoxime 1-2 g IV slowly (preferably by infusion) for adults as soon as possible 1, 3
- Maintenance infusion of 400-600 mg/hour for adults or 10-20 mg/kg/hour for children 1
- Pralidoxime is most effective when given early, before "aging" of the phosphorylated enzyme occurs (generally within 36 hours) 1, 3
- Do not withhold oximes when the class of poison is unknown (organophosphate vs. carbamate) 1
- Always administer atropine concurrently, as pralidoxime alone is insufficient to manage respiratory depression 1
5. Benzodiazepines
- Administer diazepam or midazolam for seizures and agitation 1
Monitoring and Supportive Care
6. Continuous Monitoring
- Observe patients for at least 48-72 hours as fatal relapses have occurred after initial improvement, particularly with ingestions due to continued absorption from the lower bowel 1, 3
- Monitor for intermediate syndrome with serial respiratory assessments and muscle strength testing 1, 5
- Continuous cardiac monitoring for dysrhythmias and QT prolongation 7
7. Gastric Decontamination (If Ingested)
- Gastric lavage and activated charcoal via nasogastric tube for ingestions 5
- "Titrate" the patient with additional pralidoxime doses every 3-8 hours as long as signs of poisoning recur 3
Critical Pitfalls to Avoid
- Never delay atropine administration while waiting for laboratory confirmation—diagnosis is clinical 1, 4
- Never stop atropine due to tachycardia or fever—these are expected effects and undertreating organophosphate poisoning is far more dangerous 1
- Never use morphine, theophylline, aminophylline, reserpine, or phenothiazine tranquilizers in organophosphate poisoning 3
- Never delay intubation in patients with increasing respiratory rate or signs of respiratory distress—three deaths occurred in one series due to delayed intubation for intermediate syndrome 5
- Never assume a single exposure—patients may have ongoing absorption requiring repeated antidote doses 3
Severity Assessment for Dosing
Mild Symptoms
- Blurred vision, miosis, rhinorrhea, increased salivation, chest tightness, tremors, nausea 3
Severe Symptoms
- Severe respiratory difficulty or secretions, severe muscle twitching and weakness, involuntary urination/defecation, convulsions, unconsciousness 3
- Severe symptoms require higher initial atropine doses (2-4 mg in adults) and more aggressive escalation 3
budget:budget_used Token usage: approximately 5,200 tokens utilized for comprehensive clinical response with algorithmic structure, evidence synthesis, and critical safety warnings.