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Rivastigmine to Prevent Recurrence of Antimuscarinic Delirium
Sponsor: Washington University School of Medicine
Summary
Antimuscarinic delirium (AMD) is a common and dangerous toxicology condition caused by poisoning by medications and other chemicals that block muscarinic receptors. Physostigmine is effective in reversing AMD but has a short duration of action, and patient commonly experience recurrence of AMD after initial control with physostigmine. Recent case reports and small observational studies suggest that rivastigmine, which has a longer duration of action than physostigmine, might be useful in the treatment of AMD. In order to investigate the effectiveness of rivastigmine in preventing recurrence of AMD after initial control with physostigmine, the investigators propose a randomized, placebo-controlled clinical trial of rivastigmine for AMD. The investigators hypothesize that patients treated with rivastigmine after initial control of AMD with physostigmine will experience less recurrence of antimuscarinic delirium than those treated with placebo.
Official title: Rivastigmine to Prevent Recurrence of Antimuscarinic Delirium After Initial Control With Physostigmine (RIVA-AP): a Randomized, Placebo-controlled Trial
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
10 Years - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
42
Start Date
2024-11-04
Completion Date
2026-11
Last Updated
2025-07-11
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Rivastigmine
Rivastigmine 3mg by mouth once, followed by rivastigmine 1.5mg by mouth every 1 hour as needed for ongoing delirium or agitation (at the discretion of the treating physician), for a maximum of three doses
Placebo
Matching oral placebo by mouth once, followed by placebo by mouth every 1 hour as needed for ongoing delirium or agitation (at the discretion of the treating physician), for a maximum of three doses
Locations (1)
Washington University School of Medicine
St Louis, Missouri, United States