â– LECTURE OVERVIEW: Organophosphate poisoning is a life-threatening toxidrome resulting from severe, uninhibited acetylcholinesterase inactivation that triggers massive cholinergic hyperstimulation.
â– MOLECULAR TOXICOLOGY & ACTIONS:
1. Phosphorylation of active site: Organophosphates (found in agricultural insecticides like parathion, malathion and nerve gases like sarin) bind covalently to the serine hydroxyl group of acetylcholinesterase (AChE), neutralizing the enzyme.
2. Acetylcholine Overdrive: Acetylcholine accumulates in synaptic clefts across muscarinic, nicotinic, and central nervous system synapses.
3. Cholinergic Excess (DUMBBELSS): Drives a massive cholinergic crisis: Diarrhea, Urination, Miosis, Bronchospasm/Bradycardia, Emesis, Lacrimation, Salivation, and Sweating. Nicotinic accumulation causes muscle fasciculations, muscle fatigue, flaccid paralysis (diaphragm failure), and central respiratory depression.
4. Chemical Aging: Over hours, the covalent bond undergo dealkylation ('aging'), rendering the AChE chemical blockade completely permanent and irreversible.
â– PHARMACOKINETIC & PHARMACODYNAMIC ATTRIBUTES:
Absorption and steady-state kinetics display high variability based on plasma protein binding levels, tissue volume of distribution (Vd), and hepatic CYP450 microsomal enzymatic clearance indices.
â– PEDIATRIC CONTEXT & CONTINGENCIES:
Developing cohorts present with high body-water percentages and dynamic hepatic enzyme maturation pathways.
[HY-BOARD-1152]
🌟 Dynamic Clinical Key:
Management requires a rapid, dual-action antidote: Atropine (a competitive muscarinic blocker) to address life-threatening bradycardia and bronchospasm, and Pralidoxime (2-PAM), an oxime compound designed to dephosphorylate and regenerate active AChE. Crucially, Pralidoxime must be administered before AChE 'aging' occurs to be effective. Closely monitor serum plasma concentrations if drugs display a narrow therapeutic window to mitigate toxic peaks. Always utilize body-surface-area or weight-based dosing calculators for pediatric populations.