Bradycardia – Digoxin Toxicity
Bradycardia – Digoxin Toxicity
Clinical Setting
I: You are the HDU registrar called by the ED FY2 about a patient in resus.
S: SHO reports patient is bradycardic, hypotensive and she is worried about a possible drug overdose.
B: 64 year old male. BG of Atrial fibrillation, heart failure and depression. Recent bereavement.
A: Vomiting and HR of 30, wide complexes, BP 74/51, responsive to voice (E3V4M5).
R: Called for urgent assistance
Potential Clinical Course
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Initially A own B SpO2 92% on 4L, chest crackles bi-basally, RR 28 C HR30 bpm high grade AV block, BP 74/51, D Responsive to voice
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ED FY2 is alone with an ED nurse. More help on the way - if called for. Empty bottle of digoxin by bedside
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Blood gas K 5.9, IV fluid ongoing
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Atropine has minimal effect. Becomes more drowsy – only responsive to pain
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Asks for transcutaneous pacing
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Whilst setting up pacing patient becomes unresponsive – progresses to Pulseless VT
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After 1 shock – ROSC – Idioventricular rhythm on monitor
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Cardiology Consultant arrives – takes handover and asks opinion about treatment from here
Info Sheet For Faculty
- Initial settings (visible once monitor attached):
- SpO2 92% on 4L (98% on 15L via NRM)
- RR 28/min
- HR 30bpm – wide complexes, high grade AV block on monitor
- BP 74/51
- GCS E3V4M5
- Progress to: SpO2 98% on 15L via NRM
- RR 28/min
- Increase HR to 36bpm on administration of atropine
- BP 81/54
- GCS E2V3M4
- Progress to: SpO2 88% on 15L via NRM
- RR 12/min
- HR 27bpm
- BP 68/43
- GCS E1V2M1
- Progress rapidly to:
- SpO2 unrecordable
- RR absent
- HR 184bpm VT (no palpable pulse)
- BP unrecordable
- GCS E1V1M1
- Post ROSC: SpO2 94% on either BVM/NRM
- RR 22/min
- HR 110bpm narrow complex tachycardia
- BP 94/62
- GCS E3V3M3
Faculty Roles
Emergency Medicine FY2:
- First day in resus – keen to help but not sure where anything is, how it is connected, and also unclear on doses of drugs
- Clarifies every instruction
- Enthusiastic and able to do CPR/BVM during cardiac arrest as just done ILS
- Unable to operate defibrillator
ED Nurse:
- Band 7 nurse – follows instructions well when paying attention, able to connect all monitoring and take blood samples and competent member of ALS team
- If asked: Digoxin-specific antibody fragments will have to come from pharmacy and isoprenaline will have to be retrieved from coronary care
Cardiology Consultant:
- You were in ED seeing another patient but heard someone was in resus with a severe bradycardia
- Listens attentively to handover then asks participant what they think should occur next in terms of treatment, interventions, and location