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Isopropyl alcohol toxicity
From WikEM
Contents
Background
- Main component of rubbing alcohol
- Hallmark is osmolar gap without acidosis
- Metabolized to acetone, not to an acid
- Takes 30-60 min for acetone to appear in blood; 3 hr to appear in urine
- Lethal Dose: 4-8 g/kg or 250 mL in average adult (calculated using volume of pure isopropyl alcohol)
- Typical store bought rubbing alcohol is 70% isopropyl alcohol by volume, so lethal dose is ~ 350 mL
Clinical Features
- CNS depression
- Similar to ETOH intoxication, but longer-lasting
- Usually peaks in first hour of ingestion
- GI
- Nausea/vomiting / abdominal pain / hemorrhagic gastritis
- Respiratory depression
- Fruity breath from acetone
- Hypotension, hypothermia from peripheral vasodilation
- Hypoglycemia (in malnourished patients)
Differential Diagnosis
- Starvation ketoacidosis
- Diabetic Ketoacidosis
- Inborn errors of metabolism
- Salicylate Toxicity
- Acetone ingestion
Sedative/hypnotic toxicity
- Toxic alcohols
- Ethanol
- Ethylene glycol
- Methanol
- Isopropyl alcohol
- Benzodiazepines
- Flunitrazepam (Rohypnol)
- Gamma hydroxybutyrate (GHB)
- Barbiturates
- Opioids
- Chloral hydrate
- Absinthe
Evaluation
Work-Up
- Fingerstick glucose
- Complete metabolic panel
- Serum ketones
- Serum Osmolality
- Uinarlysis
- VBG
- Aspirin/Tylenol levels
- ECG
- Serum isopropyl alcohol level (if available)
- Total CK
Evaluation
- Osmolal gap > 10; see Osmolal or Osmolar Gap
- Absence of anion gap
- Absence of metabolic acidosis
- Absence of serum beta hydroxybutyrate
- Presence of serum and urine ketones
- Consider other diagnosis if absent 2hr after ingestion
- Creatinine may be falsely elevated due to acetone interference with laboratory measurement of Cr
Toxic Alcohols Anion/Osmolar Gaps
Osmolar gap | Anion gap | |
---|---|---|
Ethanol | + | + if ketoacidosis |
Ethylene glycol | + | + |
Methanol | + | + |
Isopropyl alcohol | + | - |
Management
- Treatment is supportive.
- No role for fomepizole or ethanol
- Blockade of alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH) will prolong intoxication
- May consider hemodialysis in life threatening poisonings (rare)
Disposition
- Generally may be discharged once clinically sober.