Charcoal enhancement of treatment for tricyclic-induced mania
- PMID: 12237792
- DOI: 10.1055/s-2002-34121
Charcoal enhancement of treatment for tricyclic-induced mania
Abstract
Induction of mania by tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs) is controversial, with indirect evidence for and against it. Unusual direct evidence of it was observed in a 77-year-old female patient having ingested an amitriptyline overdose. Mania developed while the TCA blood levels were high, and responded to a combination of charcoal and valproate. However, mania reappeared when charcoal was discontinued, and disappeared again when it was restarted. This time course suggests a therapeutic advantage for adding charcoal to valproate in treating tricyclic-induced mania. Presumably, charcoal might have removed a mania-inducing metabolite of amitriptyline. Moreover, repeated doses of oral activated charcoal accelerated the elimination of TCA from the blood stream to several times its original rate, which is consistent with interruption of the enterohepatic circulation. This enhanced elimination and improved outcome illustrate the value of repeated charcoal doses after TCA overdose, and suggest its use when mania develops in a patient who takes an antidepressant, at least amitriptyline or nortriptyline.
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