Author/Authors :
Upadhyay, Ankit Jamaica Hospital Medical Center - Department of Medicine, Jamaica, USA , Bodar, Vijaykumar Jamaica Hospital Medical Center - Department of Medicine, Jamaica, USA , Malekzadegan, Mohammad Jamaica Hospital Medical Center - Department of Medicine, Jamaica, USA , Singh, Sharanjit Jamaica Hospital Medical Center - Department of Medicine, Jamaica, USA , Frumkin, William Jamaica Hospital Medical Center - Department of Medicine, Jamaica, USA , Mangla, Aditya Jamaica Hospital Medical Center - Department of Medicine, Jamaica, USA , Doshi, Kaushik Jamaica Hospital Medical Center - Department of Medicine, Jamaica, USA
Abstract :
Loperamide is over-the-counter antidiarrheal agent acting on peripherally located 𝜇 opioid receptors. It is gaining popularity
among drug abusers as opioid substitute. We report a case of a 46-year-old male that was presented after cardiac arrest. After
ruling out ischemia, cardiomyopathy, pulmonary embolism, central nervous system pathology, sepsis, and other drug toxicity, we
found out that patient was using around 100 mg of Loperamide to control his chronic diarrhea presumably because of irritable
bowel syndrome for last five years and consumed up to 200 mg of Loperamide daily for last two days before the cardiac arrest. We
hypothesize that the patient’s QTc prolongation and subsequent cardiac arrest are due to Loperamide toxicity. Patient experienced
gradual resolution of tachyarrhythmia and gradual decrease in QTc interval during hospitalization which supports the evidence
of causal relationship between Loperamide overdose and potentially fatal arrhythmias. It also provided the clue that patient may
have congenital long QT syndrome which was unmasked by Loperamide causing ventricular arrhythmias. This case adds one more
pearl in the literature to support that Loperamide overdose related cardiac toxicity does exist and it raises concerns over Loperamide
abuse in the community