Tests

1st tests to order

serum electrolytes

Test
Result
Test

Hypokalemia suggests ingestion of sympathomimetics or barium salts and is frequently accompanied by hypomagnesemia.

Hyperkalemia suggests ingestion of digoxin or fluoride-based cleaning products.

Hyponatremia suggests use of amphetamines or methylxanthines.

Hypocalcemia suggests fluoride toxicity or ethylene glycol.

Result

normal; hypokalemia with or without hypomagnesemia; hyperkalemia; hyponatremia; hypocalcemia

serum BUN

Test
Result
Test

Acute kidney injury can occur either due to overdoses that are directly nephrotoxic or as a result of rhabdomyolysis from prolonged seizures, hypotension, or acidosis.

Result

elevated in acute kidney injury

serum creatinine

Test
Result
Test

Acute kidney injury can occur either due to overdoses that are directly nephrotoxic or as a result of rhabdomyolysis from prolonged seizures, hypotension, or acidosis.

Those assays that use the Jaffe reaction to determine creatinine can have a falsely elevated creatinine in the presence of ketones.

Result

elevated in acute kidney injury

fingerstick or serum glucose

Test
Result
Test

Hypoglycemia suggests poisoning with insulin, sulfonylureas, beta-blockers, or severe salicylate poisoning.

Hyperglycemia suggests calcium-channel blocker or theophylline poisoning.

Result

normal, elevated, or reduced

capillary blood gas or ABG

Test
Result
Test

A capillary blood gas or ABG helps establish the cause of an increased anion gap acidosis.

Metabolic acidosis is seen in salicylate, toxic alcohol, or iron poisoning due to direct effects on metabolism, or in sympathomimetic or theophylline poisoning due to end-organ ischemia.

Hypoxemia with or without respiratory acidosis from hypoventilation is seen in opioid or clonidine poisoning.

Respiratory alkalosis is seen in salicylate poisoning before the onset of metabolic acidosis.

Result

normal or shows metabolic acidosis, respiratory acidosis, respiratory alkalosis, or hypoxemia

anion gap

Test
Result
Test

May be raised due to lactate, ketones, or ingested toxic alcohols.

Result

normal or increased

serum lactate

Test
Result
Test

Elevated in metabolic acidosis produced by agents that interfere with metabolism or produce ischemia.

Glycolic acid may interfere with the lactate measurement.

Result

normal or elevated

serum ketones or acetone

Test
Result
Test

Ketone formation is seen with starvation and may be seen with an overnight fast, especially if glycogen stores are low. It is also seen in salicylate poisoning and chronic abuse of alcohol in children.

Result

normal or elevated

INR

Test
Result
Test

An increased INR suggests poisoning with warfarin, another coumarin rodenticide, or a hepatotoxin (e.g., acetaminophen).

Result

normal or increased

LFTs

Test
Result
Test

Used primarily to monitor the progression of hepatotoxicity.

Abnormal LFTs indicate ingestion of a hepatotoxin, usually acetaminophen.

Results should be interpreted in the context of the INR. Improving LFTs in the face of a rising INR and rising total bilirubin suggest fulminant hepatic necrosis.

Result

normal or increased

serum acetaminophen levels

Test
Result
Test

Should be performed in all patients 4 hours after the time of the suspected ingestion. The level of serum acetaminophen relative to the time of ingestion will determine the need for subsequent treatment.[30][31]

The diagnosis of acetaminophen toxicity based on the Rumack-Matthew nomogram is reserved for single acute ingestions of acetaminophen. It cannot be used before 4 hours or after 24 hours.

The nomogram cannot be used for children with repeated supratherapeutic ingestions of acetaminophen, repeated ingestions over time, coingestion with drugs that alter gastric motility such as opioids or antimuscarinic medications, coingestion with ethanol, ingestion of sustained-release acetaminophen products, with ingestions occurring 24 hours or more before presentation, or when the time of ingestion is unknown. These cases should be discussed with a regional poison control center or a pediatric toxicologist.

Result

negative or level detected

serum salicylate levels

Test
Result
Test

Should be performed in all patients with an intentional overdose, due to the ubiquity and fatality of these ingestants.

A positive result is seen in acute salicylate poisoning, but a negative result may be seen in subacute or chronic poisoning. For this reason, the diagnosis should be based both on clinical features and on laboratory findings, including the results of ABG analysis.

Result

negative or level detected

urine drug screen

Test
Result
Test

A urine drug screen should be performed in all children with a deliberate or suspected ingestion. However, the limitations of these tests need to be appreciated. A screen may cover ingested, injected, and inhaled drugs. A range of screening assays are available, which typically cover varying numbers of commonly misused substances such as amphetamines, cocaine, phencyclidine (PCP), cannabinoids, and opioids. If a category is reported (e.g., opioids), it is important to inquire which specific substances (e.g., opium, codeine, heroin, morphine) are actually detected as some specific compounds may be excluded.

Additional testing can be ordered if needed for any substances of interest that are not covered by a given urine drug screen.

The tests are usually immunoassays that screen for a group of substances within a class of medications, and, therefore, may identify false positives (e.g., the cough suppressant dextromethorphan can give a false positive on the PCP assay). Conversely, a negative result does not exclude the presence of the drug.

The results should be interpreted in the context of clinical findings and may require confirmatory testing in legal cases.

Result

identification of select drugs of misuse (available results will vary depending on which drug screen is utilized)

urinalysis

Test
Result
Test

Calcium oxalate crystals should prompt measurement of serum ethylene glycol.

Rhabdomyolysis may be due to prolonged seizures, hypotension, or acidosis.

In cases of suspected lead toxicity, do not use urinary lead measurement with the administration of a chelating agent prior to testing urine. This is a practice referred to as “chelation challenge” or provoked urine testing.[28][29]​ Whole-blood lead measurement is the primary method of lead toxicity diagnosis.

Result

calcium oxalate crystals in ethylene glycol poisoning; heme without red blood cells in rhabdomyolysis; brown discoloration in phenol poisoning

ECG

Test
Result
Test

Certain ST-T changes and rhythms are consistent with digoxin poisoning.

An R-wave in aVR and an S wave in I and aVL are early signs of sodium channel blockade, which progress to widening of the QRS complex. Tricyclic antidepressants are the most common causative agents.

QT prolongation suggests potassium-channel blockers (neuroleptics, methadone and other opioids, arsenic), calcium-channel blockers, or hypocalcemia.

Bradycardia suggests alpha-2 agonists, calcium-channel blockers, beta-blockers, digoxin, or cholinergics.

Result

normal or characteristic changes of causative agent; arrhythmias

pregnancy test

Test
Result
Test

It is important to be aware of the presence of pregnancy when treating a toxic ingestion, as the treatment threshold for certain poisonings may be low. Treatment of the mother is usually sufficient to treat the fetus and takes precedence in therapy.

Result

exclude pregnancy in a girl of reproductive age

serum creatine kinase

Test
Result
Test

An elevated creatine kinase indicates rhabdomyolysis, which may be due to prolonged seizures, hypotension, or acidosis.

Aspartate aminotransferase is also frequently elevated in rhabdomyolysis.

Result

elevated in rhabdomyolysis

abdominal x-ray

Test
Result
Test

Radio-opaque medications and toxins include iron, heavy metals, certain chlorinated hydrocarbons, enteric-coated pills, and phenothiazines.

Result

radio-opaque bodies in the gastrointestinal tract in heavy metal or foreign body ingestion

chest x-ray

Test
Result
Test

Should be performed in patients with severe respiratory symptoms or in whom aspiration is suspected.

Hydrocarbon ingestions require a repeat chest x-ray 6 hours from ingestion if an initial one is done soon after the ingestion. In this case, initial radiographic findings may not be evident soon after the exposure. Interval development of infiltrate or respiratory symptoms should prompt admission.

Result

normal or signs of pulmonary edema or aspiration

Investigations to avoid

hair or nail testing

Recommendations
Rationale
Recommendations

Do not perform hair or nail testing for metal poisoning screening in patients with nonspecific symptoms.[32]​​

Rationale

Testing for a patient’s potential exposure to metals should be tailored to a specific metal exposure, based on an appropriate evaluation.[32]​ Nonspecific hair and nail testing methods for multiple metals are often unreliable, and may subject patients to potentially harmful diagnostic mislabeling and subsequent detrimental therapy.[32]

Tests to consider

ethanol level

Test
Result
Test

Should be considered in older children suspected of substance misuse. Any detectable level of ethanol using serum alcohol levels is diagnostic. There are situations that may cause a false positive with a breathalyzer.

Result

negative or level detected

serum methanol or ethylene glycol

Test
Result
Test

Should be measured if clinical symptoms suggest these poisonings or if there is an anion gap on ABG that is not explained by lactate or ketones. Ethylene glycol levels should also be measured if calcium oxalate crystals are found on urine exam.

Result

negative or level detected

serum digoxin level

Test
Result
Test

Should be considered if digoxin toxicity is suspected based on the clinical features, presence of hyperkalemia, or ECG findings.

Result

negative or level detected

serum anticonvulsant levels

Test
Result
Test

Should be considered if toxicity due to phenobarbital, phenytoin, valproate, or carbamazepine is suspected.

Result

negative or level detected

serum iron levels

Test
Result
Test

Levels should be measured 4 hours postingestion. Levels taken >6 hours postingestion may underestimate toxicity. Lower serum iron levels cannot eliminate the possibility of toxicity.

Result

normal or elevated iron

serum lithium, theophylline, or whole blood heavy metal levels

Test
Result
Test

Levels should be obtained if poisoning with any of these agents is suspected.

Some metal poisonings may require urine levels.

Do not order broad heavy metal screening tests to assess nonspecific symptoms in the absence of excessive exposure to metals because this can lead to unnecessary concern when results are outside of a normal range.[32]

Result

negative or positive for ingested substance

comprehensive urine drug screen

Test
Result
Test

May be considered as a confirmatory test.

Designed to test for several hundred medications using a sensitive and specific method, but it is time-consuming.

The results should be interpreted in the context of the clinical features.

Result

identification of ingested substances

therapeutic trial of naloxone

Test
Result
Test

Should be given if features of the opioid toxidrome are present and there is evidence of respiratory depression; a positive response may be diagnostic of opioid ingestion, but may sometimes be seen in clonidine ingestion.

Should not be given if the patient is intubated.

Result

positive response in opioid or alpha-2 agonist ingestion

therapeutic trial of sodium bicarbonate

Test
Result
Test

Should only be given in consultation with an expert experienced in the management of poisoning in children.

If the QRS does not narrow, or symptoms do not improve, check the serum pH to ensure that the pH is between 7.45 and 7.55. If it is not, repeat dosing.

Result

narrowing of the QRS in sodium-channel blocker toxicity; improvement in symptoms in salicylate poisoning

therapeutic trial of atropine and pralidoxime

Test
Result
Test

Should be given if there are features of the cholinergic toxidrome, in consultation with an expert in the management of poisoning in children.

Result

positive response in cholinesterase inhibitor poisoning

therapeutic trial of flumazenil

Test
Result
Test

May be considered if there are clinical features of the sedative-hypnotic toxidrome in patients who are not chronically taking benzodiazepines and withdrawal is not a concern. This should be given in consultation with an expert experienced in the management of poisoning in children.

Result

positive response in benzodiazepine poisoning

therapeutic trial of octreotide

Test
Result
Test

May be given if there is hypoglycemia suspected to be due to sulfonylurea toxicity or massive insulin injection. This should be given in consultation with an expert experienced in the management of poisoning in children.

Result

improvement in blood glucose levels

therapeutic trial of physostigmine

Test
Result
Test

Consider in cases with signs of peripheral and central antimuscarinic features in appropriate patients.

Expert consultation before using physostigmine for these patients is recommended as its use in some poisonings (e.g., tricyclic antidepressants) may be contraindicated.

Result

improvement in mental status or peripheral antimuscarinic symptoms

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