Toxicology
Dexmedetomidine
α2-receptor agonist, which may help control BP and HR; however, it will not prevent seizures.
May reduce overall benzodiazepine requirements; however, it lacks the activity necessary to
prevent seizures.
Recommended when clonidine cannot be administered and as adjunct therapy
encephalopathy and hypomagnesemia. High dose intravenous folic acid, thiamine, and magnesium
should be administered to nutrient-deficient patients. Dextrose containing fluids may also be considered
Clinical Institute Withdrawal Assessment for Alcohol Scale (revised version) (CIWA-Ar) or the
Minnesota Detoxification Scale (MINDS) to determine the severity of symptoms and treatment
in intubated patients to guide benzodiazepine dosing.
Vital signs every 2–4 hours
Electroencephalogram for sustained seizure-related activity
Agent
Suggested Starting Dose
Suggested Interval/Infusion Dose Range
Diazepam
5–20 mg PO/IV
Every 6–8 hr
Lorazepam
2–4 mg PO/IV
Every 4–6 hr
Phenobarbital
65– 260 mg or 10 mg/kg IV
Every 15–20 min until symptoms are controlled
Clonidine
0.1–0.3 mg PO
Every 8–12 hr
Baclofen
5–10 mg PO
Every 8–12 hr
Gabapentin
600–800 mg PO
Every 8 hr
Propofol
10–20 mcg/kg/min IV
20–70 mcg/kg/min
Dexmedetomidine
0.2–0.4 mcg/kg/hr IV
0.4–1.5 mcg/kg/hr
Ketamine
0.15–0.2 mg/kg/hr IV
0.2–0.3 mg/kg/hr
Thiamine
100–500 mg IV
Every 8–24 hr for 3–5 days
Folic acid
1–5 mg IV
Once daily for 3–5 days
Magnesium
1–4 g IV
Once daily for 3–5 days
IV = intravenously; PO = orally or per tube.
Cardiovascular agents accounted for a little more than 110,000 toxic exposures in 2022 and were a
leading cause of death secondary to pharmaceutical exposure.
(28,547 cases and 23 deaths in 2022) and calcium channel blockers (15,718 cases and 30 deaths in 2022).