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For further information, see CMDT Part 38-53: Salicylates Overdose
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Essentials of Diagnosis
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Tachypnea, altered mental status
Metabolic acidosis
Typical arterial blood gases reveal respiratory alkalosis and metabolic acidosis
Elevated salicylate level diagnostic
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General Considerations
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Salicylates (eg, aspirin, methyl salicylate, bismuth subsalicylate) are found in a variety of over-the-counter and prescription medications
Salicylates uncouple cellular oxidative phosphorylation, resulting in anaerobic metabolism and excessive production of lactic acid and heat, and interfere with several Krebs cycle enzymes
A single ingestion of more than 200 mg/kg of salicylate can cause intoxication
Poisoning may also occur as a result of excessive dosing over several days
Although the half-life of salicylate is 2–3 h after small doses, it may increase to 20 h or more in patients with intoxication
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Acute ingestion
Moderate intoxication
Serious intoxication
Agitation, confusion, seizures
Cardiovascular collapse, pulmonary edema, hyperthermia
Death
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Diagnosis is suspected in any patient with an anion gap metabolic acidosis and is confirmed by measuring the stat serum salicylate level
Patients with serum salicylate levels > 100 mg/dL (1000 mg/L or 7.2 mcmol/L) after an acute overdose are more likely to have severe poisoning
Patients with subacute or chronic intoxication may suffer severe symptoms with serum salicylate levels of only 60–70 mg/dL (4.3–5 mcmol/L)
Arterial blood gases typically reveal a respiratory alkalosis with an underlying metabolic acidosis
Prothrombin time is often elevated owing to salicylate-induced hypoprothrombinemia
Central nervous system intracellular glucose depletion can occur despite normal measured serum glucose levels
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Emergency and supportive measures
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