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Tricyclic Antidepressant (TCA) Overdose: Pediatric & Geriatric Deviations (Histochemical Mapping)

Central Nervous System Specialty Division
â–  LECTURE OVERVIEW: Tricyclic Antidepressant (TCA) overdose is a major toxicological emergency characterized by multi-system receptors blockade. â–  THE CARDIOVASCULAR AND CENTRAL TOXICITIES: 1. Rapid Cardiac Sodium Channel Inactivation: TCAs block fast sodium channels (IKr) in myocardial tissue, slowing Phase 0 of the action potential and prolonging the QRS interval. This drives severe intraventricular conduction delays and lethal ventricular arrhythmias. 2. Anticholinergic Overdrive: Blocks muscarinic (M1) receptors, producing central and peripheral anticholinergic syndrome (altered mental status, dry skin, dilated non-reactive pupils, urinary retention, and hyperthermia). 3. Vascular Collapse: Inhibits alpha-1 adrenergic receptors, preventing peripheral vasoconstriction and causing refractory hypotension. 4. Neuronal Excitability: Blocks GABA-A receptors in the brain, lowering the seizure threshold and precipitating status epilepticus. â–  SPECIAL CLINICAL POPULATIONS & METABOLIC DEVIATIONS: Infants display higher body water ratios and immature renal filtration capacity, whereas geriatric cohorts exhibit reduced physiologic reserves, progressive heart/renal decline, and polypharmacy interactions. â–  HISTOCHEMICAL & SPECIAL STAIN ANALYSIS: Tissue examination is enhanced by specialized dyes and immunophenotypic markers that target cellular structure with remarkable specificity. [HY-BOARD-1334]

🌟 Dynamic Clinical Key:

First-line, life-saving treatment is intravenous Sodium Bicarbonate (NaHCO3). The sodium load increases extracellular sodium concentration to overcome the TCA-mediated blockade, while the systemic alkalorization (raising pH to 7.45-7.55) converts the TCA molecule into its neutral, non-ionized form, reducing its affinity for sodium channels. Adjust weight-based dosing for pediatric cohorts and use the 'start low and go slow' approach for seniors. Always cross-reference histochemical stains with structural boundaries on the biopsy.

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