King W D, Holloway M, Palmisano P A
Children's Hospital of Alabama, Regional Poison Control Center, Birmingham 35233.
Pediatr Emerg Care. 1992 Oct;8(5):268-71.
The increase in the use of selective beta 2 agonists as first-choice agents in the therapy of asthma has resulted in a concomitant increase in overdoses and other therapeutic misadventures. This case describes a 22-month-old child who ingested a large overdose of albuterol, resulting in an acute syndrome consisting of agitation, tremulousness, marked hyperglycemia of > 320 mg/dl (17.8 mmol/L), ketonuria, and hypokalemia. Such toxicity has generally been reported only in diabetics or pregnant patients. These findings and a brief review of the pharmacology and toxicology of beta 2 agonists are detailed, with special emphasis on the differential diagnosis of overdoses characterized by hyperglycemia, hypokalemia, agitation, and tremulousness. A system of ordering the relative toxicity of these (and other) drugs is proffered using the exposure-case fatality rate (ECFR) as a crude measure of clinical toxicity (while delineating its shortcomings). Applying the ECFR (using American Association of Poison Control Centers' data base) to beta 2 agonist overdoses indicates that the resulting clinical syndrome, while troublesome, generally results in a benign outcome.