TY - JOUR
T1 - Flecainide Toxicity Secondary to Accidental Overdose
T2 - A Pediatric Case Report of Two Brothers
AU - Gardner Yelton, Sarah E.
AU - Leonard, James B.
AU - De La Uz, Caridad M.
AU - Wadia, Rajeev S.
AU - Barnes, Sean S.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 Sarah E. Gardner Yelton et al.
PY - 2021
Y1 - 2021
N2 - Flecainide is a class 1C antiarrhythmic with a narrow therapeutic window and thereby a high-risk medication for causing acute toxicity. Dysrhythmias secondary to flecainide ingestion are often refractory to antiarrhythmics and cardioversion, and patients commonly require extracorporeal support. We review the successful resuscitation of two brothers aged 2 and 4 who presented two years apart with unstable wide-complex tachyarrhythmia suspicious for severe flecainide toxicity. Each patient received sodium bicarbonate and 20% intravenous lipid emulsion with a full recovery. While extracorporeal support is often required following flecainide ingestion, we present two cases where it was avoided due to aggressive multimodal management with sodium bicarbonate, electrolyte repletion, and 20% intravenous lipid emulsion. In addition, avoidance of agitation-induced tachycardia may be beneficial.
AB - Flecainide is a class 1C antiarrhythmic with a narrow therapeutic window and thereby a high-risk medication for causing acute toxicity. Dysrhythmias secondary to flecainide ingestion are often refractory to antiarrhythmics and cardioversion, and patients commonly require extracorporeal support. We review the successful resuscitation of two brothers aged 2 and 4 who presented two years apart with unstable wide-complex tachyarrhythmia suspicious for severe flecainide toxicity. Each patient received sodium bicarbonate and 20% intravenous lipid emulsion with a full recovery. While extracorporeal support is often required following flecainide ingestion, we present two cases where it was avoided due to aggressive multimodal management with sodium bicarbonate, electrolyte repletion, and 20% intravenous lipid emulsion. In addition, avoidance of agitation-induced tachycardia may be beneficial.
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U2 - 10.1155/2021/6633859
DO - 10.1155/2021/6633859
M3 - Article
C2 - 34094603
AN - SCOPUS:85106977143
SN - 2090-6420
VL - 2021
JO - Case Reports in Critical Care
JF - Case Reports in Critical Care
M1 - 6633859
ER -