Digoxin toxicity: Difference between revisions

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== Background ==
==Background==
*Digoxin (digitalis) is a cardiac glycoside used for [[atrial fibrillation]] rate control and [[heart failure]]
*Narrow therapeutic index (therapeutic level: 0.5-2.0 ng/mL)
*Mechanism of action: inhibits Na/K-ATPase → increased intracellular calcium → increased contractility
*Also increases vagal tone (AV nodal blockade)
*Toxicity occurs from:
**Acute ingestion (intentional overdose, accidental)
**Chronic accumulation (most common — renal insufficiency, drug interactions, dehydration)
*Drug interactions that increase digoxin levels:
**Amiodarone (increases level by ~50%), verapamil, diltiazem, quinidine
**Macrolide antibiotics (erythromycin, clarithromycin)
**Cyclosporine, itraconazole
*Conditions that increase sensitivity to digoxin:
**Hypokalemia (most important — K and digoxin compete for same binding site)
**Hypomagnesemia, hypercalcemia, hypothyroidism, [[renal failure]]
*Mortality without antidote: up to 20-30% in significant poisoning


*Positive inotropic effect
==Clinical Features==
**Inhibits Na-K pump -> incr extracelluar K, incr intracellular Na -> incr intracellular Ca
===GI (Often Earliest)===
*Increases vagal tone
*Nausea, vomiting, anorexia (most common symptoms)
**Can lead to bradyarrhythmias (esp in young)
*Abdominal pain, diarrhea
*Increases automaticity
**Can lead to tachyarrhythmias (esp in elderly)
*Renally cleared
*Hemodialysis does not work
*1 fab vial binds 0.5mg of digoxin


== Risk Factors ==
===Cardiac (Most Dangerous)===
*Almost ANY dysrhythmia can occur
*Classic: increased automaticity + decreased conduction
*Most common arrhythmia: PVCs
*Highly suggestive rhythms:
**Bidirectional ventricular tachycardia (nearly pathognomonic)<ref>Smith TW. Digitalis: Mechanisms of action and clinical use. N Engl J Med. 1988;318(6):358-365. PMID 3277052</ref>
**Atrial tachycardia with AV block (PAT with block)
**Accelerated junctional rhythm
**Regularized atrial fibrillation (AF with complete heart block + junctional escape)
*Sinus [[bradycardia]], AV block (1st, 2nd, 3rd degree)
*Ventricular fibrillation / asystole (in severe toxicity)


*Electrolyte Imbalance
===Neurologic===
**Hypokalemia, hypomagnesemia, Hypercalcemia
*Visual disturbances: xanthopsia (yellow-green halo vision), blurred vision, photophobia
*Hypovolemia
*Confusion, delirium, weakness, fatigue
*Renal insufficiency
*Drowsiness
*Cardiac ischemia
*Hypothyroidism
*Meds
**CCBs, amiodarone


== Clinical Manifestations ==
===Metabolic===
*Hyperkalemia in acute toxicity (Na/K-ATPase inhibition → K moves extracellularly)
**K >5.0 in acute digoxin poisoning is a marker of severe toxicity
**In chronic toxicity, K is often low (from concurrent diuretic use)


Cardiac
==Differential Diagnosis==
*Other causes of bradycardia with heart block
*[[Beta-blocker]] or [[calcium channel blocker overdose]]
*[[Hyperkalemia]]
*Oleander or foxglove poisoning (contain cardiac glycosides)
*Other causes of bidirectional VT: catecholaminergic polymorphic VT, aconitine


*Any type of dysrhythmia is possible except for rapidly conducted atrial arrhythmias
==Evaluation==
*Most common:
*ECG (look for dysrhythmias, ST changes)
**PVCs
**'''Digitalis effect''' (scooped ST depression, "Salvador Dali mustache") ≠ toxicity
**Bradycardia
**Digitalis toxicity = arrhythmias
*Digitalis Effect
*Digoxin level:
**T wave changes
**Therapeutic: 0.5-2.0 ng/mL
**QT interval shortening
**Draw level ≥6 hours after last dose (allows tissue distribution)
**Scooped ST segments with depression in lateral leads
**Level >2.0 suggests toxicity but clinical correlation is essential
**Level may be falsely elevated after Digibind (measures bound + unbound)
*BMP: potassium (critical — hypokalemia worsens toxicity), creatinine, magnesium, calcium
*Magnesium level (hypomagnesemia increases digoxin sensitivity)


GI
==Management==
===Digoxin-Specific Antibody Fragments (DigiFab/Digibind)===
*Definitive antidote — highly effective
*Indications for empiric dosing:
**'''Life-threatening arrhythmias''' (VT, VF, symptomatic bradycardia, high-grade AV block)
**Hyperkalemia >5.0 mEq/L in acute poisoning
**Hemodynamic instability
**Digoxin level >10 ng/mL (acute) or >4 ng/mL (chronic) with symptoms
*Dosing:
**If amount ingested known: # vials = (body load in mg × 0.8) / 0.5
**If level known: # vials = (level ng/mL × weight kg) / 100
**'''Empiric dosing''': '''10-20 vials''' for acute life-threatening toxicity; '''3-6 vials''' for chronic toxicity
**Onset: 30-60 minutes
*Each vial binds ~0.5 mg digoxin
*Post-Digibind: total digoxin level rises (bound to antibody) but free digoxin decreases


*Nausea/vomiting
===Supportive Measures===
*Abdominal pain
*Correct hypokalemia to >4.0 mEq/L (in chronic toxicity)
*Correct hypomagnesemia: magnesium sulfate 2g IV
*Calcium: CONTROVERSIAL in digoxin toxicity
**Traditional teaching: avoid calcium (risk of "stone heart")
**Recent evidence suggests risk may be overstated, but '''use with extreme caution'''
**If hyperkalemic arrest, may give calcium but administer Digibind simultaneously
*Atropine for symptomatic bradycardia: 0.5-1 mg IV (may repeat)
*Activated charcoal if acute ingestion within 1-2 hours and protected airway
*Avoid electrical cardioversion if possible (may precipitate VF in digitalis toxicity)
*If cardioversion unavoidable: use lowest effective energy


Neuro
===What to Avoid===
*No calcium (controversial — may worsen toxicity)
*No Class IA antiarrhythmics (procainamide, quinidine — worsen conduction)
*Minimize cardioversion
*No beta-blockers (worsen bradycardia/AV block)


*Confusion
===Refractory Cases===
*Weakness
*Lidocaine (for ventricular arrhythmias not responsive to Digibind)
*Visual disturbances
*Phenytoin (can improve conduction through AV node; historical use)
**Yellow halos
*Temporary pacing for complete heart block refractory to atropine and Digibind
**Scotomas
*Consider hemodialysis — does NOT effectively remove digoxin (highly protein/tissue bound) but may help if Digibind unavailable
*Delirium


 
==Disposition==
 
*Admit all symptomatic patients to monitored bed or ICU
== Work-Up ==
*ICU for arrhythmias, hemodynamic instability, or Digibind administration
 
*Continuous telemetry for minimum 12-24 hours
*Dig level
*Serial digoxin levels are NOT useful post-Digibind (measures total, not free)
**Normal = 0.8-2 ng/mL (ideal = 0.7-1.1)
*Poison control: 1-800-222-1222
***May have toxicity even with "therapeutic" levels
**Measure serum level at least 6 hours after acute ingestion (if stable), immediately for chronic ingestion
***If measure before this may be falsely elevated due to incomplete drug distribution
*Chemistry
**Hyperkalemia level correlates with degree of toxicity
**Hypokalemia increases susceptibility in chronic toxicity
**Hypomagnesemia is common
*Cr/BUN
*Urine output
*ECG (serial)
 
== Treatment ==
===Fab Fragment Therapy===
*Indications
**Severe rhythm disturbances refractory to conventional therapy
**End-organ dysfunction
**Hyperkalemia >5 after acute overdose
**Pacemaker (may mask cardiac dysrhythmia)
**Consider for:
***Dig level > 10 in acute ingestion
***Dig level > 4 in chronic ingestion
***If adult acutely ingests > 10mg
***If child acutely ingests > 4mg
*Side effects
**Allergic reaction
**Withdrawal of dig effect:
***CHF, a fib w/ RVR
**Hypokalemia
*Initial response time ~ 20min, peak effect ~ 90min
 
*How To Use
**'''1. Neither amount ingested nor digoxin level are known:'''
***Adult dose
****10 vials over 30 min
***Peds dose
****5 vials over 30 min
****Repeat dose if clinical response is inadequate
**'''2. Amount ingested is known but digoxin level is unknown'''
**Step 1: Calculate total body load (TBL)
***TBL = dose (in mg) ingested
**Step 2: Calculate number of vials needed
***Number of vials = TBL X 2 (round up to nearest whole number)
**'''3. Steady state digoxin level is known'''
**Number of vials = (dig level(in ng/mL) X pt wt) / 100
**'''4. Chronic toxicity without severe signs'''
**Give half the recommended dose
***Otherwise may unmask the condition for which the pt is taking digoxin
**'''5. Cardiac Arrest'''
***20 vials administered undiluted by IV bolus
 
===Activated charcoal===
*Questionable efficacy
*Only an adjunctive tx; NOT an alternative to fab fragment therapy
*Consider only if present within 1 hr of ingestion
*1g/kg (max 50g)
 
===Rhythm Disturbances===
*Fab fragments is the agent of choice for all dysrhythmias!
*Bradyarrhythmias (symptomatic)
**Atropine 0.5mg IV
**Pacing
*Tachyarrhythmias
**Lidocaine
***1-3mg/kg over several minutes, followed by 1-4mg/min
**Phenytoin
***May enhance AV conduction
***Infuse at 25-50 mg/min to a loading dose of 10-15mg/kg
*Cardioversion
**Consider lower energy settings (25-50J)
 
===Hyperkalemia===
*Treat with Fab, not with usual meds
**Once fab is given hyperkalemia will rapidly correct
**Aggressive tx with potassium-lowering agents could cause sig hypokalemia following therapy
*If Fab is not available and hyperkalemia is life-threatening then treat
*Calcium is controversial (some say dangerous, others say not)
 
===Hypokalemia===
*Chronic intoxication
**Raise level to 3.5-4
*Acute intoxication
**Do not treat (likely that potassium level is rapidly rising)
 
===Hypomagnesemia===
*Treat with 1-2g over 10-20 min
**Monitor for resp depresion
**Avoid in pts with:
***Renal failure
***Bradydysrhythmias/conduction blocks


==See Also==
==See Also==
[[Toxidromes]]
*[[Toxicology]]
*[[Atrial fibrillation]]
*[[Heart failure]]
*[[Hyperkalemia]]
*[[Cardiac arrest]]
*[[Beta-blocker toxicity]]
*[[Calcium channel blocker overdose]]


== Source ==
==References==
Rosen's
*Hauptman PJ, Kelly RA. Digitalis. ''Circulation''. 1999;99(9):1265-1270. PMID 10069797
*Hack JB, Lewin NA. Cardioactive steroids. In: ''Goldfrank's Toxicologic Emergencies''. 10th ed. McGraw-Hill. 2015.
*Chan BS, Buckley NA. Digoxin-specific antibody fragments in the treatment of digoxin toxicity. ''Clin Toxicol''. 2014;52(8):824-836. PMID 25089630
*Levine M, et al. The effects of intravenous calcium in patients with digoxin toxicity. ''J Emerg Med''. 2011;40(1):41-46. PMID 18814997


[[Category:Cards]]
[[Category:Toxicology]]
[[Category:Tox]]
[[Category:Cardiology]]

Latest revision as of 10:25, 22 March 2026

Background

  • Digoxin (digitalis) is a cardiac glycoside used for atrial fibrillation rate control and heart failure
  • Narrow therapeutic index (therapeutic level: 0.5-2.0 ng/mL)
  • Mechanism of action: inhibits Na/K-ATPase → increased intracellular calcium → increased contractility
  • Also increases vagal tone (AV nodal blockade)
  • Toxicity occurs from:
    • Acute ingestion (intentional overdose, accidental)
    • Chronic accumulation (most common — renal insufficiency, drug interactions, dehydration)
  • Drug interactions that increase digoxin levels:
    • Amiodarone (increases level by ~50%), verapamil, diltiazem, quinidine
    • Macrolide antibiotics (erythromycin, clarithromycin)
    • Cyclosporine, itraconazole
  • Conditions that increase sensitivity to digoxin:
    • Hypokalemia (most important — K and digoxin compete for same binding site)
    • Hypomagnesemia, hypercalcemia, hypothyroidism, renal failure
  • Mortality without antidote: up to 20-30% in significant poisoning

Clinical Features

GI (Often Earliest)

  • Nausea, vomiting, anorexia (most common symptoms)
  • Abdominal pain, diarrhea

Cardiac (Most Dangerous)

  • Almost ANY dysrhythmia can occur
  • Classic: increased automaticity + decreased conduction
  • Most common arrhythmia: PVCs
  • Highly suggestive rhythms:
    • Bidirectional ventricular tachycardia (nearly pathognomonic)[1]
    • Atrial tachycardia with AV block (PAT with block)
    • Accelerated junctional rhythm
    • Regularized atrial fibrillation (AF with complete heart block + junctional escape)
  • Sinus bradycardia, AV block (1st, 2nd, 3rd degree)
  • Ventricular fibrillation / asystole (in severe toxicity)

Neurologic

  • Visual disturbances: xanthopsia (yellow-green halo vision), blurred vision, photophobia
  • Confusion, delirium, weakness, fatigue
  • Drowsiness

Metabolic

  • Hyperkalemia in acute toxicity (Na/K-ATPase inhibition → K moves extracellularly)
    • K >5.0 in acute digoxin poisoning is a marker of severe toxicity
    • In chronic toxicity, K is often low (from concurrent diuretic use)

Differential Diagnosis

Evaluation

  • ECG (look for dysrhythmias, ST changes)
    • Digitalis effect (scooped ST depression, "Salvador Dali mustache") ≠ toxicity
    • Digitalis toxicity = arrhythmias
  • Digoxin level:
    • Therapeutic: 0.5-2.0 ng/mL
    • Draw level ≥6 hours after last dose (allows tissue distribution)
    • Level >2.0 suggests toxicity but clinical correlation is essential
    • Level may be falsely elevated after Digibind (measures bound + unbound)
  • BMP: potassium (critical — hypokalemia worsens toxicity), creatinine, magnesium, calcium
  • Magnesium level (hypomagnesemia increases digoxin sensitivity)

Management

Digoxin-Specific Antibody Fragments (DigiFab/Digibind)

  • Definitive antidote — highly effective
  • Indications for empiric dosing:
    • Life-threatening arrhythmias (VT, VF, symptomatic bradycardia, high-grade AV block)
    • Hyperkalemia >5.0 mEq/L in acute poisoning
    • Hemodynamic instability
    • Digoxin level >10 ng/mL (acute) or >4 ng/mL (chronic) with symptoms
  • Dosing:
    • If amount ingested known: # vials = (body load in mg × 0.8) / 0.5
    • If level known: # vials = (level ng/mL × weight kg) / 100
    • Empiric dosing: 10-20 vials for acute life-threatening toxicity; 3-6 vials for chronic toxicity
    • Onset: 30-60 minutes
  • Each vial binds ~0.5 mg digoxin
  • Post-Digibind: total digoxin level rises (bound to antibody) but free digoxin decreases

Supportive Measures

  • Correct hypokalemia to >4.0 mEq/L (in chronic toxicity)
  • Correct hypomagnesemia: magnesium sulfate 2g IV
  • Calcium: CONTROVERSIAL in digoxin toxicity
    • Traditional teaching: avoid calcium (risk of "stone heart")
    • Recent evidence suggests risk may be overstated, but use with extreme caution
    • If hyperkalemic arrest, may give calcium but administer Digibind simultaneously
  • Atropine for symptomatic bradycardia: 0.5-1 mg IV (may repeat)
  • Activated charcoal if acute ingestion within 1-2 hours and protected airway
  • Avoid electrical cardioversion if possible (may precipitate VF in digitalis toxicity)
  • If cardioversion unavoidable: use lowest effective energy

What to Avoid

  • No calcium (controversial — may worsen toxicity)
  • No Class IA antiarrhythmics (procainamide, quinidine — worsen conduction)
  • Minimize cardioversion
  • No beta-blockers (worsen bradycardia/AV block)

Refractory Cases

  • Lidocaine (for ventricular arrhythmias not responsive to Digibind)
  • Phenytoin (can improve conduction through AV node; historical use)
  • Temporary pacing for complete heart block refractory to atropine and Digibind
  • Consider hemodialysis — does NOT effectively remove digoxin (highly protein/tissue bound) but may help if Digibind unavailable

Disposition

  • Admit all symptomatic patients to monitored bed or ICU
  • ICU for arrhythmias, hemodynamic instability, or Digibind administration
  • Continuous telemetry for minimum 12-24 hours
  • Serial digoxin levels are NOT useful post-Digibind (measures total, not free)
  • Poison control: 1-800-222-1222

See Also

References

  • Hauptman PJ, Kelly RA. Digitalis. Circulation. 1999;99(9):1265-1270. PMID 10069797
  • Hack JB, Lewin NA. Cardioactive steroids. In: Goldfrank's Toxicologic Emergencies. 10th ed. McGraw-Hill. 2015.
  • Chan BS, Buckley NA. Digoxin-specific antibody fragments in the treatment of digoxin toxicity. Clin Toxicol. 2014;52(8):824-836. PMID 25089630
  • Levine M, et al. The effects of intravenous calcium in patients with digoxin toxicity. J Emerg Med. 2011;40(1):41-46. PMID 18814997
  1. Smith TW. Digitalis: Mechanisms of action and clinical use. N Engl J Med. 1988;318(6):358-365. PMID 3277052