Serotonin syndrome: Difference between revisions

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==Background==
==Background==
*Can be produced by any serotonergic medication
*Drug-induced excess serotonergic activity in CNS and peripheral nervous system
*Vast majority of cases occur with therapeutic dosages
*Usually results from combination of serotonergic agents or dose increase of a single agent
*Most common cause of death is severe hyperthermia
*Onset typically within 6-24 hours (usually within 6 hours of medication change)
*Mild cases are common; '''severe cases can be life-threatening'''
*Mortality ~2-12% in severe cases


===Causative Agents===
===Common Causative Agents===
*[[SSRIs]]
*SSRIs: fluoxetine, sertraline, paroxetine, citalopram, escitalopram
*MAOIs
*SNRIs: venlafaxine, duloxetine
*TCAs
*MAOIs: phenelzine, tranylcypromine, selegiline, linezolid, methylene blue
*Drugs of Abuse: Cocaine, Ecstasy, Marijuana
*TCAs: amitriptyline, clomipramine
*Analgesics: Demerol, fentanyl
*Opioids: tramadol, meperidine (Demerol), fentanyl, methadone
*Antiemetics
*Triptans: sumatriptan (controversial, risk likely low)
*Triptans
*Other: dextromethorphan, [[lithium]], MDMA ("ecstasy"), cocaine, ondansetron (rare)
*Bromocriptine
*Most dangerous combination: MAOI + serotonergic agent
*OTC: Cough meds, herbal products, St John’s Wort


==Clinical Features==
==Clinical Features==
*[[Altered mental status]]: Agitated delirium
*Rapid onset (hours) — distinguishes from [[neuroleptic malignant syndrome]] (days)
*Autonomic Instability: Hyperthermia, Tachycardia, hypertension, diaphoresis <ref>Boyer, E. W. and Shannon, M. (2005) ‘The Serotonin Syndrome’, New England Journal of Medicine, 352(11), pp. 1112–1120. doi: 10.1056/nejmra041867</ref>
*Hunter Serotonin Toxicity Criteria<ref>Dunkley EJ, et al. The Hunter Serotonin Toxicity Criteria: simple and accurate diagnostic decision rules. ''QJM''. 2003;96(9):635-642. PMID 12925718</ref> (most sensitive/specific):
**Often labile blood pressure, HR
**In setting of serotonergic agent + any ONE of:
*Neuromuscular Abnormalities: Myoclonus, ocular clonus, rigidity, hyperreflexia, tremor
***Spontaneous clonus (most important finding)
**More pronounced in the lower extremities
***Inducible clonus + agitation or diaphoresis
**Myoclonus: most common finding
***Ocular clonus + agitation or diaphoresis
***Important to identify because it does not occur in other conditions that mimic serotonin syndrome
***Tremor + hyperreflexia
***Hypertonia + temperature >38°C + ocular or inducible clonus
 
===Clinical Triad===
*Neuromuscular excitation: clonus (spontaneous, inducible, or ocular), hyperreflexia, tremor, myoclonus, rigidity (severe)
*Autonomic dysfunction: diaphoresis, [[tachycardia]], [[hyperthermia]], hypertension, mydriasis, hyperactive bowel sounds, diarrhea
*'''Altered mental status''': agitation, anxiety, confusion, delirium
 
===Severity Spectrum===
*Mild: tremor, hyperreflexia, tachycardia, diaphoresis
*Moderate: agitation, clonus, mydriasis, hyperthermia (≤40°C)
*Severe: hyperthermia >40°C, rigidity, seizures, [[rhabdomyolysis]], [[DIC]], cardiovascular collapse


==Differential Diagnosis==
==Differential Diagnosis==
{{AMS and fever DDX}}
{| class="wikitable"
|-
! Feature !! '''Serotonin Syndrome''' !! '''[[Neuroleptic malignant syndrome]]''' !! '''[[Anticholinergic toxicity]]''' !! '''[[Malignant hyperthermia]]'''
|-
| Onset || '''Hours''' || Days || Hours || Minutes (OR)
|-
| Key finding || '''Clonus/hyperreflexia''' || Lead-pipe rigidity || Mydriasis, dry || Generalized rigidity
|-
| Bowel sounds || '''Hyperactive''' || Normal/decreased || '''Absent''' || Normal
|-
| Skin || Diaphoresis || Diaphoresis || '''Dry, flushed''' || Mottled
|-
| Pupils || Mydriasis || Normal || Mydriasis || Normal
|-
| CK || Mildly elevated || >1000 || Normal || Markedly elevated
|}
 
==Evaluation==
*Clinical diagnosis based on Hunter criteria — no confirmatory lab test
*CK: mildly elevated (markedly elevated if severe → [[rhabdomyolysis]])
*BMP: electrolytes, creatinine (renal injury), bicarbonate (acidosis)
*CBC, LFTs
*Lactate
*Coagulation studies (DIC in severe cases)
*Core temperature
*Medication reconciliation is essential — identify all serotonergic agents
 
==Management==
===Immediate===
*Discontinue ALL serotonergic agents
*Most mild cases resolve within 24-72 hours after drug cessation
 
===Mild (Tremor, Hyperreflexia)===
*Observation, IV fluids, benzodiazepines PRN for agitation
*Supportive care


==Diagnosis==
===Moderate (Agitation, Clonus, Hyperthermia <40°C)===
===Hunter Toxicity Criteria Decision Rules===
*Benzodiazepines for agitation and autonomic instability:
Serotonergic agent plus 1 of the following<ref>Dunkley EJ, Isbister GK, Sibbritt D, Dawson AH, Whyte IM. The Hunter Serotonin Toxicity Criteria: simple and accurate diagnostic decision rules for serotonin toxicity. QJM 2003;96:635-642</ref>:
**Lorazepam 2-4 mg IV q5-10min, or midazolam
*Spontaneous clonus
*Active cooling for hyperthermia (evaporative cooling, ice packs)
*Inducible clonus AND (agitation or diaphoresis)
*IV fluid resuscitation
*Ocular Clonus AND (agitation or diaphoresis)
*Tremor AND hyperreflexia
*Hypertonia AND temp >38 AND (ocular clonus or inducible clonus)


''84% Sn, 97% Sp''
===Severe (Hyperthermia >40°C, Rigidity, Seizures)===
*Cyproheptadine (serotonin antagonist):
**12 mg PO/NG initial dose, then 2 mg q2h until clinical improvement
**Maintenance: 8 mg PO q6h
**Only available PO/NG — '''crush and give via NG if intubated'''
*'''Intubation with neuromuscular blockade''' for severe rigidity/hyperthermia
**Use non-depolarizing agent (avoid succinylcholine if hyperkalemia/rhabdomyolysis risk)
*Aggressive cooling
*Benzodiazepines for seizures


==Treatment==
===What to Avoid===
*Discontinue all serotonergic drugs
*NO antipyretics (not effective — hyperthermia is from muscle activity, not altered setpoint)
*[[Benzos]]
*NO bromocriptine (for NMS, not SS)
**Goal is to eliminate agitation, neuromuscular abnormalities, elevations in HR/BP
*NO dantrolene (limited role; rigidity in SS is different from NMS)
*Cyproheptadine
*Avoid restraints alone without chemical sedation (isometric muscle contraction worsens hyperthermia)
**Give if benzos and supportive care fail to improve agitation and abnormal vitals
**Serotonin antagonist
**Give 12mg PO/NG; repeat with 2mg q2hr until clinical response is seen (max 32mg/d)
**Give 4mg q6hr x48hr if pt is responsive to initial dose
*Treat hyperthermia
**Hyperthermia due to increase in muscular activity, not change in set point
**[[Intubate]] and paralyze if temp > 41.1
**Standard [[cooling measures]]
**Antipyretics not helpful as hypothalamic set point is changed


==Disposition==
==Disposition==
*Mild: observe 6-12 hours; discharge if improving after drug cessation
*Moderate: admit to monitored bed
*Severe: ICU admission
*Symptoms typically resolve within 24-72 hours (longer for fluoxetine/MAOIs — longer half-life)
*Before restarting serotonergic medications: allow washout period (5 half-lives)
**Fluoxetine: 5 weeks; MAOIs: 2 weeks


==See Also==
==See Also==
*[[Toxidromes]]
*[[Neuroleptic malignant syndrome]]
*[[Anticholinergic toxicity]]
*[[Malignant hyperthermia]]
*[[Toxicology]]
*[[MAOI toxicity]]


==References==
==References==
<references/>
<references/>
*Boyer EW, Shannon M. The serotonin syndrome. ''N Engl J Med''. 2005;352(11):1112-1120. PMID 15784664
*Isbister GK, et al. Serotonin toxicity: a practical approach to diagnosis and treatment. ''Med J Aust''. 2007;187(6):361-365. PMID 17874986
*Ables AZ, Nagubilli R. Prevention, recognition, and management of serotonin syndrome. ''Am Fam Physician''. 2010;81(9):1139-1142. PMID 20433130


[[Category:Tox]]
[[Category:Toxicology]]
[[Category:Psychiatry]]

Latest revision as of 09:30, 22 March 2026

Background

  • Drug-induced excess serotonergic activity in CNS and peripheral nervous system
  • Usually results from combination of serotonergic agents or dose increase of a single agent
  • Onset typically within 6-24 hours (usually within 6 hours of medication change)
  • Mild cases are common; severe cases can be life-threatening
  • Mortality ~2-12% in severe cases

Common Causative Agents

  • SSRIs: fluoxetine, sertraline, paroxetine, citalopram, escitalopram
  • SNRIs: venlafaxine, duloxetine
  • MAOIs: phenelzine, tranylcypromine, selegiline, linezolid, methylene blue
  • TCAs: amitriptyline, clomipramine
  • Opioids: tramadol, meperidine (Demerol), fentanyl, methadone
  • Triptans: sumatriptan (controversial, risk likely low)
  • Other: dextromethorphan, lithium, MDMA ("ecstasy"), cocaine, ondansetron (rare)
  • Most dangerous combination: MAOI + serotonergic agent

Clinical Features

  • Rapid onset (hours) — distinguishes from neuroleptic malignant syndrome (days)
  • Hunter Serotonin Toxicity Criteria[1] (most sensitive/specific):
    • In setting of serotonergic agent + any ONE of:
      • Spontaneous clonus (most important finding)
      • Inducible clonus + agitation or diaphoresis
      • Ocular clonus + agitation or diaphoresis
      • Tremor + hyperreflexia
      • Hypertonia + temperature >38°C + ocular or inducible clonus

Clinical Triad

  • Neuromuscular excitation: clonus (spontaneous, inducible, or ocular), hyperreflexia, tremor, myoclonus, rigidity (severe)
  • Autonomic dysfunction: diaphoresis, tachycardia, hyperthermia, hypertension, mydriasis, hyperactive bowel sounds, diarrhea
  • Altered mental status: agitation, anxiety, confusion, delirium

Severity Spectrum

  • Mild: tremor, hyperreflexia, tachycardia, diaphoresis
  • Moderate: agitation, clonus, mydriasis, hyperthermia (≤40°C)
  • Severe: hyperthermia >40°C, rigidity, seizures, rhabdomyolysis, DIC, cardiovascular collapse

Differential Diagnosis

Feature Serotonin Syndrome Neuroleptic malignant syndrome Anticholinergic toxicity Malignant hyperthermia
Onset Hours Days Hours Minutes (OR)
Key finding Clonus/hyperreflexia Lead-pipe rigidity Mydriasis, dry Generalized rigidity
Bowel sounds Hyperactive Normal/decreased Absent Normal
Skin Diaphoresis Diaphoresis Dry, flushed Mottled
Pupils Mydriasis Normal Mydriasis Normal
CK Mildly elevated >1000 Normal Markedly elevated

Evaluation

  • Clinical diagnosis based on Hunter criteria — no confirmatory lab test
  • CK: mildly elevated (markedly elevated if severe → rhabdomyolysis)
  • BMP: electrolytes, creatinine (renal injury), bicarbonate (acidosis)
  • CBC, LFTs
  • Lactate
  • Coagulation studies (DIC in severe cases)
  • Core temperature
  • Medication reconciliation is essential — identify all serotonergic agents

Management

Immediate

  • Discontinue ALL serotonergic agents
  • Most mild cases resolve within 24-72 hours after drug cessation

Mild (Tremor, Hyperreflexia)

  • Observation, IV fluids, benzodiazepines PRN for agitation
  • Supportive care

Moderate (Agitation, Clonus, Hyperthermia <40°C)

  • Benzodiazepines for agitation and autonomic instability:
    • Lorazepam 2-4 mg IV q5-10min, or midazolam
  • Active cooling for hyperthermia (evaporative cooling, ice packs)
  • IV fluid resuscitation

Severe (Hyperthermia >40°C, Rigidity, Seizures)

  • Cyproheptadine (serotonin antagonist):
    • 12 mg PO/NG initial dose, then 2 mg q2h until clinical improvement
    • Maintenance: 8 mg PO q6h
    • Only available PO/NG — crush and give via NG if intubated
  • Intubation with neuromuscular blockade for severe rigidity/hyperthermia
    • Use non-depolarizing agent (avoid succinylcholine if hyperkalemia/rhabdomyolysis risk)
  • Aggressive cooling
  • Benzodiazepines for seizures

What to Avoid

  • NO antipyretics (not effective — hyperthermia is from muscle activity, not altered setpoint)
  • NO bromocriptine (for NMS, not SS)
  • NO dantrolene (limited role; rigidity in SS is different from NMS)
  • Avoid restraints alone without chemical sedation (isometric muscle contraction worsens hyperthermia)

Disposition

  • Mild: observe 6-12 hours; discharge if improving after drug cessation
  • Moderate: admit to monitored bed
  • Severe: ICU admission
  • Symptoms typically resolve within 24-72 hours (longer for fluoxetine/MAOIs — longer half-life)
  • Before restarting serotonergic medications: allow washout period (5 half-lives)
    • Fluoxetine: 5 weeks; MAOIs: 2 weeks

See Also

References

  1. Dunkley EJ, et al. The Hunter Serotonin Toxicity Criteria: simple and accurate diagnostic decision rules. QJM. 2003;96(9):635-642. PMID 12925718
  • Boyer EW, Shannon M. The serotonin syndrome. N Engl J Med. 2005;352(11):1112-1120. PMID 15784664
  • Isbister GK, et al. Serotonin toxicity: a practical approach to diagnosis and treatment. Med J Aust. 2007;187(6):361-365. PMID 17874986
  • Ables AZ, Nagubilli R. Prevention, recognition, and management of serotonin syndrome. Am Fam Physician. 2010;81(9):1139-1142. PMID 20433130