Cesium toxicity: Difference between revisions

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Cesium toxicity is an uncommon but potentially fatal poisoning caused by ingestion of cesium chloride (CsCl), most commonly as a '''complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) "cancer treatment."''' The primary danger is '''severe QTc prolongation''' with resultant ventricular tachycardia, [[Torsades de pointes|torsades de pointes]], and cardiac arrest.<ref name="Sessions2013">Sessions D, et al. Fatal Cesium Chloride Toxicity After Alternative Cancer Treatment. ''J Altern Complement Med''. 2013;19(12):973-975. doi:10.1089/acm.2012.0731</ref>
==Background==
==Background==
*Cesium toxicity is an uncommon but potentially fatal poisoning caused by ingestion of cesium chloride (CsCl), most commonly as a complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) "cancer treatment." The primary danger is severe QTc prolongation with resultant ventricular tachycardia, [[Torsades de pointes|torsades de pointes]], and cardiac arrest.<ref name="Sessions2013">Sessions D, et al. Fatal Cesium Chloride Toxicity After Alternative Cancer Treatment. ''J Altern Complement Med''. 2013;19(12):973-975. doi:10.1089/acm.2012.0731</ref>
*Cesium (Cs) is an alkali metal in the periodic table below potassium and rubidium
*Cesium (Cs) is an alkali metal in the periodic table below potassium and rubidium
*'''Cesium chloride (CsCl)''' is the form most commonly encountered in human toxicity
* Cesium chloride (CsCl) is the form most commonly encountered in human toxicity
*Sold online and in alternative health stores as a purported cancer treatment based on '''"high pH therapy"''' — the unproven claim that alkalinizing acidic cancer cells will destroy them<ref name="Dalal2004">Dalal AK, Harding JD, Verdino RJ. Acquired long QT syndrome and monomorphic ventricular tachycardia after alternative treatment with cesium chloride for brain cancer. ''Mayo Clin Proc''. 2004;79(8):1065-1069.</ref>
*Sold online and in alternative health stores as a purported cancer treatment based on "high pH therapy" — the unproven claim that alkalinizing acidic cancer cells will destroy them<ref name="Dalal2004">Dalal AK, Harding JD, Verdino RJ. Acquired long QT syndrome and monomorphic ventricular tachycardia after alternative treatment with cesium chloride for brain cancer. ''Mayo Clin Proc''. 2004;79(8):1065-1069.</ref>
*'''No controlled clinical trial has demonstrated any anticancer efficacy of CsCl'''<ref name="Sessions2013"/>
* No controlled clinical trial has demonstrated any anticancer efficacy of CsCl<ref name="Sessions2013"/>
*Proponents often recommend CsCl combined with selenium, high-dose vitamins A and C, zinc, and amygdalin (laetrile)<ref name="Sessions2013"/>
*Proponents often recommend CsCl combined with selenium, high-dose vitamins A and C, zinc, and amygdalin (laetrile)<ref name="Sessions2013"/>
*Patients frequently do not disclose CsCl use to their oncologists or emergency physicians
*Patients frequently do not disclose CsCl use to their oncologists or emergency physicians
*Cesium is also encountered in:
*Cesium is also encountered in:
**'''Radioactive form (¹³⁷Cs, ¹³⁴Cs):''' nuclear fission products; radiation exposure from nuclear accidents (managed with Prussian blue)
** Radioactive form (¹³⁷Cs, ¹³⁴Cs): nuclear fission products; radiation exposure from nuclear accidents (managed with Prussian blue)
**'''Occupational:''' electronics manufacturing, energy production (rare significant exposure)
** Occupational: electronics manufacturing, energy production (rare significant exposure)
*'''Toxicity threshold:''' intakes of ≥6 g/day have produced severe cardiac toxicity; even lower doses (1-3 g/day) can cause QTc prolongation over weeks of use<ref name="Pinter2014">Pinter A, et al. Clinical effects of cesium intake. ''Pharmacol Res''. 2014;36(1):36-44. doi:10.1016/j.phrs.2009.06.003</ref>
* Toxicity threshold: intakes of ≥6 g/day have produced severe cardiac toxicity; even lower doses (1-3 g/day) can cause QTc prolongation over weeks of use<ref name="Pinter2014">Pinter A, et al. Clinical effects of cesium intake. ''Pharmacol Res''. 2014;36(1):36-44. doi:10.1016/j.phrs.2009.06.003</ref>
*Cesium has an extremely long biological half-life (~110 days for the slow compartment), meaning toxicity '''resolves slowly''' over days to weeks after cessation<ref name="ATSDR">Toxicological Profile for Cesium. Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR). 2004.</ref>
*Cesium has an extremely long biological half-life (~110 days for the slow compartment), meaning toxicity resolves slowly over days to weeks after cessation<ref name="ATSDR">Toxicological Profile for Cesium. Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR). 2004.</ref>


===Mechanism of toxicity===
===Mechanism of toxicity===
*Cesium '''blocks delayed rectifier potassium channels (Iₖᵣ)''' on atrial and ventricular myocytes<ref name="Sessions2013"/>
*Cesium blocks delayed rectifier potassium channels (Iₖᵣ) on atrial and ventricular myocytes<ref name="Sessions2013"/>
*This prolongs '''phase 3 repolarization''' of the cardiac action potential → prolonged QT interval
*This prolongs phase 3 repolarization of the cardiac action potential → prolonged QT interval
*Creates substrate for '''early afterdepolarizations (EADs)''' → triggered arrhythmias
*Creates substrate for early afterdepolarizations (EADs) → triggered arrhythmias
*Cesium competes with potassium for transport through potassium channels, displacing K⁺ intracellularly → causes '''hypokalemia''' and '''hypomagnesemia''', which further exacerbate QTc prolongation<ref name="Pinter2014"/>
*Cesium competes with potassium for transport through potassium channels, displacing K⁺ intracellularly → causes hypokalemia and hypomagnesemia, which further exacerbate QTc prolongation<ref name="Pinter2014"/>
*Hypokalemia and bradycardia synergistically increase the arrhythmogenic substrate
*Hypokalemia and bradycardia synergistically increase the arrhythmogenic substrate
*Net effect: '''acquired long QT syndrome''' with high risk of [[Torsades de pointes|torsades de pointes]] and [[Ventricular tachycardia|ventricular tachycardia]]
*Net effect: acquired long QT syndrome with high risk of [[Torsades de pointes|torsades de pointes]] and [[Ventricular tachycardia|ventricular tachycardia]]


==Clinical features==
==Clinical features==
Line 30: Line 29:


===Moderate to severe toxicity===
===Moderate to severe toxicity===
*'''Syncope''' (often the presenting complaint that brings patients to the ED)<ref name="Lyon2003">Lyon AW, Mayhew WJ. Cesium toxicity: a case of self-treatment by alternate therapy gone awry. ''Ther Drug Monit''. 2003;25(1):114-116.</ref>
* Syncope (often the presenting complaint that brings patients to the ED)<ref name="Lyon2003">Lyon AW, Mayhew WJ. Cesium toxicity: a case of self-treatment by alternate therapy gone awry. ''Ther Drug Monit''. 2003;25(1):114-116.</ref>
*'''Palpitations'''
* Palpitations
*'''Seizures'''<ref name="Dalal2004"/>
* Seizures<ref name="Dalal2004"/>


===Cardiac toxicity (the primary life-threatening feature)===
===Cardiac toxicity (the primary life-threatening feature)===
*'''"Acquired long QT syndrome":''' QTc prolongation (reported up to >700 msec)<ref name="Sessions2013"/>
* "Acquired long QT syndrome": QTc prolongation (reported up to >700 msec)<ref name="Sessions2013"/>
*'''Polymorphic ventricular tachycardia / [[Torsades de pointes]]''' — the most dangerous manifestation
* Polymorphic ventricular tachycardia / [[Torsades de pointes]] — the most dangerous manifestation
*'''Monomorphic ventricular tachycardia'''
* Monomorphic ventricular tachycardia
*'''R-on-T phenomenon'''
* R-on-T phenomenon
*Premature ventricular contractions (PVCs)
*Premature ventricular contractions (PVCs)
*Atrial fibrillation
*Atrial fibrillation
*'''Cardiac arrest''' (VT/VF)<ref name="Sessions2013"/>
* Cardiac arrest (VT/VF)<ref name="Sessions2013"/>


===Electrolyte abnormalities===
===Electrolyte abnormalities===
*'''[[Hypokalemia]]''' — often severe; results from cesium displacing potassium<ref name="Pinter2014"/>
* [[Hypokalemia]] — often severe; results from cesium displacing potassium<ref name="Pinter2014"/>
*'''Hypomagnesemia'''
* Hypomagnesemia
*Both electrolyte disturbances worsen QTc prolongation and arrhythmia risk
*Both electrolyte disturbances worsen QTc prolongation and arrhythmia risk


Line 51: Line 50:
*QTc prolongation may develop over days to weeks of oral CsCl use
*QTc prolongation may develop over days to weeks of oral CsCl use
*Cardiac arrhythmias may occur suddenly without warning
*Cardiac arrhythmias may occur suddenly without warning
*After cessation, QTc prolongation resolves slowly ('''days to weeks''') due to cesium's long half-life<ref name="Dalal2004"/>
*After cessation, QTc prolongation resolves slowly (days to weeks) due to cesium's long half-life<ref name="Dalal2004"/>


==Differential diagnosis==
==Differential diagnosis==
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*Laetrile/amygdalin toxicity ([[Cyanide poisoning]])
*Laetrile/amygdalin toxicity ([[Cyanide poisoning]])
*Selenium toxicity
*Selenium toxicity
{{Prolonged QT DDX}}


==Evaluation==
==Evaluation==
===Workup===
===Workup===
*'''Detailed history of supplement/CAM use''' — ''the single most important diagnostic step''
* Detailed history of supplement/CAM use — ''the single most important diagnostic step''
**Patients often do not volunteer CsCl use; ask specifically about alternative cancer treatments, supplements, "high pH therapy," "alkalinization therapy"
**Patients often do not volunteer CsCl use; ask specifically about alternative cancer treatments, supplements, "high pH therapy," "alkalinization therapy"
**Ask about concurrent supplement use (selenium, laetrile, high-dose vitamins)
**Ask about concurrent supplement use (selenium, laetrile, high-dose vitamins)
*'''12-lead ECG:''' QTc measurement is critical<ref name="Sessions2013"/>
* 12-lead ECG: QTc measurement is critical<ref name="Sessions2013"/>
**QTc >500 msec is high-risk for torsades de pointes
**QTc >500 msec is high-risk for torsades de pointes
**Reported QTc values in cesium toxicity: 546-735 msec
**Reported QTc values in cesium toxicity: 546-735 msec
**Look for PVCs, R-on-T phenomenon, VT
**Look for PVCs, R-on-T phenomenon, VT
*'''Continuous cardiac monitoring''' on telemetry
* Continuous cardiac monitoring on telemetry
*'''Electrolytes:''' potassium, magnesium, calcium (expect hypokalemia and hypomagnesemia)
* Electrolytes: potassium, magnesium, calcium (expect hypokalemia and hypomagnesemia)
*'''BMP:''' renal function
* BMP: renal function
*'''Troponin:''' usually negative (no structural heart disease); helps exclude ACS
* Troponin: usually negative (no structural heart disease); helps exclude ACS
*'''Echocardiography:''' typically normal ventricular function; excludes structural causes
* Echocardiography: typically normal ventricular function; excludes structural causes
*'''Cesium levels:'''
* Cesium levels:
**Whole blood cesium level (reference range <10 μg/L); levels >10,000 μg/L have been associated with fatal outcomes<ref name="Sessions2013"/>
**Whole blood cesium level (reference range <10 μg/L); levels >10,000 μg/L have been associated with fatal outcomes<ref name="Sessions2013"/>
**Plasma cesium level (reference range <10 μg/L)
**Plasma cesium level (reference range <10 μg/L)
**Urine cesium level
**Urine cesium level
**Levels confirm diagnosis but do '''not''' reliably correlate with QTc duration or arrhythmia severity
**Levels confirm diagnosis but do not reliably correlate with QTc duration or arrhythmia severity
**Treatment should '''not''' be delayed pending levels
**Treatment should not be delayed pending levels


===Diagnosis===
===Diagnosis===
*Clinical: history of CsCl supplement use + QTc prolongation + hypokalemia ± arrhythmia
*Clinical: history of CsCl supplement use + QTc prolongation + hypokalemia ± arrhythmia
*High index of suspicion needed in any cancer patient presenting with syncope, palpitations, or new arrhythmia — ask about CAM use
*High index of suspicion needed in any cancer patient presenting with syncope, palpitations, or new arrhythmia — ask about CAM use
*Cesium toxicity should be included in the differential diagnosis of '''unexplained acquired long QT syndrome'''<ref name="Lyon2003"/>
*Cesium toxicity should be included in the differential diagnosis of unexplained acquired long QT syndrome<ref name="Lyon2003"/>


==Management==
==Management==
===Immediate===
===Immediate===
*'''Stop cesium chloride immediately'''
*'''Stop cesium chloride immediately'''
*'''Continuous cardiac monitoring''' — high risk of VT/torsades
* Continuous cardiac monitoring — high risk of VT/torsades
*'''IV access; resuscitation equipment at bedside'''
* IV access; resuscitation equipment at bedside


===Electrolyte repletion===
===Electrolyte repletion===
*'''Aggressive IV potassium repletion''' — target high-normal serum K⁺ (4.5-5.0 mEq/L) to counteract cesium's potassium-displacing effect
* Aggressive IV potassium repletion — target high-normal serum K⁺ (4.5-5.0 mEq/L) to counteract cesium's potassium-displacing effect
**Cesium-associated hypokalemia may be refractory to standard repletion; '''amiloride''' (a potassium-sparing diuretic that blocks the distal tubular sodium channel through which cesium enters) has been used successfully as adjunctive therapy<ref name="Horn2015">Horn S, Naidus E, Alper SL, Danziger J. Cesium-associated hypokalemia successfully treated with amiloride. ''Clin Kidney J''. 2015;8(3):335-338. doi:10.1093/ckj/sfv017</ref>
**Cesium-associated hypokalemia may be refractory to standard repletion; amiloride (a potassium-sparing diuretic that blocks the distal tubular sodium channel through which cesium enters) has been used successfully as adjunctive therapy<ref name="Horn2015">Horn S, Naidus E, Alper SL, Danziger J. Cesium-associated hypokalemia successfully treated with amiloride. ''Clin Kidney J''. 2015;8(3):335-338. doi:10.1093/ckj/sfv017</ref>
*'''IV magnesium sulfate''' — replete aggressively; magnesium is also first-line treatment for torsades de pointes
* IV magnesium sulfate — replete aggressively; magnesium is also first-line treatment for torsades de pointes
*Monitor electrolytes frequently (at least q4-6h initially)
*Monitor electrolytes frequently (at least q4-6h initially)


===Arrhythmia management===
===Arrhythmia management===
*'''Torsades de pointes:'''
* Torsades de pointes:
**'''IV magnesium sulfate''' 2 g IV bolus (first-line)
** IV magnesium sulfate 2 g IV bolus (first-line)
**'''Overdrive pacing''' (transvenous or transcutaneous) — increases heart rate to shorten QT interval and suppress EADs<ref name="Dalal2004"/>
** Overdrive pacing (transvenous or transcutaneous) — increases heart rate to shorten QT interval and suppress EADs<ref name="Dalal2004"/>
**'''Isoproterenol''' infusion — temporizing measure to increase heart rate if pacing unavailable
** Isoproterenol infusion — temporizing measure to increase heart rate if pacing unavailable
**'''Electrical cardioversion/defibrillation''' for hemodynamically unstable VT/VF
** Electrical cardioversion/defibrillation for hemodynamically unstable VT/VF
*'''Monomorphic VT:'''
* Monomorphic VT:
**'''IV lidocaine''' — reported effective in cesium-induced VT<ref name="Dalal2004"/>
** IV lidocaine — reported effective in cesium-induced VT<ref name="Dalal2004"/>
*'''Avoid class IA (procainamide, quinidine), class IC, and class III (amiodarone, sotalol) antiarrhythmics''' — all prolong QTc and will worsen the arrhythmogenic substrate<ref name="Sessions2013"/>
* Avoid class IA (procainamide, quinidine), class IC, and class III (amiodarone, sotalol) antiarrhythmics — all prolong QTc and will worsen the arrhythmogenic substrate<ref name="Sessions2013"/>
*'''Avoid other QTc-prolonging medications''' (ondansetron, droperidol, haloperidol, fluoroquinolones, etc.)
* Avoid other QTc-prolonging medications (ondansetron, droperidol, haloperidol, fluoroquinolones, etc.)


===Enhanced elimination===
===Enhanced elimination===
*'''Prussian blue (ferric hexacyanoferrate):''' 1 g PO three times daily<ref name="Sessions2013"/>
* Prussian blue (ferric hexacyanoferrate): 1 g PO three times daily<ref name="Sessions2013"/>
**Binds cesium in the GI lumen via ion exchange, preventing reabsorption and enhancing fecal excretion
**Binds cesium in the GI lumen via ion exchange, preventing reabsorption and enhancing fecal excretion
**FDA-approved for treatment of radioactive cesium (¹³⁷Cs) contamination; has been used off-label for stable cesium (CsCl) toxicity
**FDA-approved for treatment of radioactive cesium (¹³⁷Cs) contamination; has been used off-label for stable cesium (CsCl) toxicity
**Reduces biological half-life of cesium to approximately one-third of normal<ref name="ATSDR"/>
**Reduces biological half-life of cesium to approximately one-third of normal<ref name="ATSDR"/>
**Available through the Radiation Emergency Assistance Center/Training Site (REAC/TS) or Strategic National Stockpile
**Available through the Radiation Emergency Assistance Center/Training Site (REAC/TS) or Strategic National Stockpile
*'''Hemodialysis:''' cesium is dialyzable given its low molecular weight and distribution similar to potassium; may be considered in severe life-threatening toxicity, though clinical data are limited
* Hemodialysis: cesium is dialyzable given its low molecular weight and distribution similar to potassium; may be considered in severe life-threatening toxicity, though clinical data are limited
*Note: even with treatment, QTc prolongation may take '''days to weeks''' to resolve due to cesium's long tissue half-life
*Note: even with treatment, QTc prolongation may take days to weeks to resolve due to cesium's long tissue half-life


===Supportive care===
===Supportive care===
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==Disposition==
==Disposition==
*'''All patients with QTc prolongation from cesium:''' admit to ICU or cardiac-monitored setting
* All patients with QTc prolongation from cesium: admit to ICU or cardiac-monitored setting
*'''Continuous telemetry''' until QTc consistently <500 msec and no arrhythmias for 24-48 hours
* Continuous telemetry until QTc consistently <500 msec and no arrhythmias for 24-48 hours
*Serial ECGs and electrolytes q4-6h initially, then q12h as QTc improves
*Serial ECGs and electrolytes q4-6h initially, then q12h as QTc improves
*QTc may remain prolonged for '''days to weeks''' — do not discharge prematurely
*QTc may remain prolonged for '''days to weeks''' — do not discharge prematurely
*'''Cessation of CsCl is mandatory''' — counsel patient and family clearly that CsCl has no proven anticancer benefit and is life-threatening
* Cessation of CsCl is mandatory — counsel patient and family clearly that CsCl has no proven anticancer benefit and is life-threatening
*Consider ongoing Prussian blue therapy if available
*Consider ongoing Prussian blue therapy if available
*Follow-up with cardiology and oncology
*Follow-up with cardiology and oncology
*'''All intentional ingestions:''' psychiatric evaluation mandatory prior to discharge
* All intentional ingestions: psychiatric evaluation mandatory prior to discharge
*Contact [[Poison control]] (1-800-222-1222 in the US) for all cases
*Contact [[Poison control]] (1-800-222-1222 in the US) for all cases
==Medication Dosing==
{{MedicationDose
| drug = Magnesium sulfate
| dose = 2g IV bolus
| route = IV
| context = First-line for QTc prolongation
| indication = Cesium toxicity
| population = Adult
}}


==See Also==
==See Also==

Latest revision as of 09:24, 22 March 2026

Background

  • Cesium toxicity is an uncommon but potentially fatal poisoning caused by ingestion of cesium chloride (CsCl), most commonly as a complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) "cancer treatment." The primary danger is severe QTc prolongation with resultant ventricular tachycardia, torsades de pointes, and cardiac arrest.[1]
  • Cesium (Cs) is an alkali metal in the periodic table below potassium and rubidium
  • Cesium chloride (CsCl) is the form most commonly encountered in human toxicity
  • Sold online and in alternative health stores as a purported cancer treatment based on "high pH therapy" — the unproven claim that alkalinizing acidic cancer cells will destroy them[2]
  • No controlled clinical trial has demonstrated any anticancer efficacy of CsCl[1]
  • Proponents often recommend CsCl combined with selenium, high-dose vitamins A and C, zinc, and amygdalin (laetrile)[1]
  • Patients frequently do not disclose CsCl use to their oncologists or emergency physicians
  • Cesium is also encountered in:
    • Radioactive form (¹³⁷Cs, ¹³⁴Cs): nuclear fission products; radiation exposure from nuclear accidents (managed with Prussian blue)
    • Occupational: electronics manufacturing, energy production (rare significant exposure)
  • Toxicity threshold: intakes of ≥6 g/day have produced severe cardiac toxicity; even lower doses (1-3 g/day) can cause QTc prolongation over weeks of use[3]
  • Cesium has an extremely long biological half-life (~110 days for the slow compartment), meaning toxicity resolves slowly over days to weeks after cessation[4]

Mechanism of toxicity

  • Cesium blocks delayed rectifier potassium channels (Iₖᵣ) on atrial and ventricular myocytes[1]
  • This prolongs phase 3 repolarization of the cardiac action potential → prolonged QT interval
  • Creates substrate for early afterdepolarizations (EADs) → triggered arrhythmias
  • Cesium competes with potassium for transport through potassium channels, displacing K⁺ intracellularly → causes hypokalemia and hypomagnesemia, which further exacerbate QTc prolongation[3]
  • Hypokalemia and bradycardia synergistically increase the arrhythmogenic substrate
  • Net effect: acquired long QT syndrome with high risk of torsades de pointes and ventricular tachycardia

Clinical features

Mild toxicity (early or low-dose)

  • GI distress: nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, decreased appetite
  • Numbness or tingling of the lips
  • Fatigue, muscle weakness
  • Hypotension, lightheadedness

Moderate to severe toxicity

  • Syncope (often the presenting complaint that brings patients to the ED)[5]
  • Palpitations
  • Seizures[2]

Cardiac toxicity (the primary life-threatening feature)

  • "Acquired long QT syndrome": QTc prolongation (reported up to >700 msec)[1]
  • Polymorphic ventricular tachycardia / Torsades de pointes — the most dangerous manifestation
  • Monomorphic ventricular tachycardia
  • R-on-T phenomenon
  • Premature ventricular contractions (PVCs)
  • Atrial fibrillation
  • Cardiac arrest (VT/VF)[1]

Electrolyte abnormalities

  • Hypokalemia — often severe; results from cesium displacing potassium[3]
  • Hypomagnesemia
  • Both electrolyte disturbances worsen QTc prolongation and arrhythmia risk

Timeline

  • QTc prolongation may develop over days to weeks of oral CsCl use
  • Cardiac arrhythmias may occur suddenly without warning
  • After cessation, QTc prolongation resolves slowly (days to weeks) due to cesium's long half-life[2]

Differential diagnosis

Acquired Long QT syndrome (other causes)

  • Drug-induced QTc prolongation (antiarrhythmics, antipsychotics, fluoroquinolones, antiemetics, methadone)
  • Hypokalemia (other causes)
  • Hypomagnesemia (other causes)
  • Hypocalcemia
  • Hypothermia
  • Myocardial ischemia

Other causes of syncope with arrhythmia

Other supplement/CAM toxicities


Prolonged QT interval

Evaluation

Workup

  • Detailed history of supplement/CAM use — the single most important diagnostic step
    • Patients often do not volunteer CsCl use; ask specifically about alternative cancer treatments, supplements, "high pH therapy," "alkalinization therapy"
    • Ask about concurrent supplement use (selenium, laetrile, high-dose vitamins)
  • 12-lead ECG: QTc measurement is critical[1]
    • QTc >500 msec is high-risk for torsades de pointes
    • Reported QTc values in cesium toxicity: 546-735 msec
    • Look for PVCs, R-on-T phenomenon, VT
  • Continuous cardiac monitoring on telemetry
  • Electrolytes: potassium, magnesium, calcium (expect hypokalemia and hypomagnesemia)
  • BMP: renal function
  • Troponin: usually negative (no structural heart disease); helps exclude ACS
  • Echocardiography: typically normal ventricular function; excludes structural causes
  • Cesium levels:
    • Whole blood cesium level (reference range <10 μg/L); levels >10,000 μg/L have been associated with fatal outcomes[1]
    • Plasma cesium level (reference range <10 μg/L)
    • Urine cesium level
    • Levels confirm diagnosis but do not reliably correlate with QTc duration or arrhythmia severity
    • Treatment should not be delayed pending levels

Diagnosis

  • Clinical: history of CsCl supplement use + QTc prolongation + hypokalemia ± arrhythmia
  • High index of suspicion needed in any cancer patient presenting with syncope, palpitations, or new arrhythmia — ask about CAM use
  • Cesium toxicity should be included in the differential diagnosis of unexplained acquired long QT syndrome[5]

Management

Immediate

  • Stop cesium chloride immediately
  • Continuous cardiac monitoring — high risk of VT/torsades
  • IV access; resuscitation equipment at bedside

Electrolyte repletion

  • Aggressive IV potassium repletion — target high-normal serum K⁺ (4.5-5.0 mEq/L) to counteract cesium's potassium-displacing effect
    • Cesium-associated hypokalemia may be refractory to standard repletion; amiloride (a potassium-sparing diuretic that blocks the distal tubular sodium channel through which cesium enters) has been used successfully as adjunctive therapy[6]
  • IV magnesium sulfate — replete aggressively; magnesium is also first-line treatment for torsades de pointes
  • Monitor electrolytes frequently (at least q4-6h initially)

Arrhythmia management

  • Torsades de pointes:
    • IV magnesium sulfate 2 g IV bolus (first-line)
    • Overdrive pacing (transvenous or transcutaneous) — increases heart rate to shorten QT interval and suppress EADs[2]
    • Isoproterenol infusion — temporizing measure to increase heart rate if pacing unavailable
    • Electrical cardioversion/defibrillation for hemodynamically unstable VT/VF
  • Monomorphic VT:
    • IV lidocaine — reported effective in cesium-induced VT[2]
  • Avoid class IA (procainamide, quinidine), class IC, and class III (amiodarone, sotalol) antiarrhythmics — all prolong QTc and will worsen the arrhythmogenic substrate[1]
  • Avoid other QTc-prolonging medications (ondansetron, droperidol, haloperidol, fluoroquinolones, etc.)

Enhanced elimination

  • Prussian blue (ferric hexacyanoferrate): 1 g PO three times daily[1]
    • Binds cesium in the GI lumen via ion exchange, preventing reabsorption and enhancing fecal excretion
    • FDA-approved for treatment of radioactive cesium (¹³⁷Cs) contamination; has been used off-label for stable cesium (CsCl) toxicity
    • Reduces biological half-life of cesium to approximately one-third of normal[4]
    • Available through the Radiation Emergency Assistance Center/Training Site (REAC/TS) or Strategic National Stockpile
  • Hemodialysis: cesium is dialyzable given its low molecular weight and distribution similar to potassium; may be considered in severe life-threatening toxicity, though clinical data are limited
  • Note: even with treatment, QTc prolongation may take days to weeks to resolve due to cesium's long tissue half-life

Supportive care

  • Seizure management: benzodiazepines first-line
  • Hemodynamic support as needed

Disposition

  • All patients with QTc prolongation from cesium: admit to ICU or cardiac-monitored setting
  • Continuous telemetry until QTc consistently <500 msec and no arrhythmias for 24-48 hours
  • Serial ECGs and electrolytes q4-6h initially, then q12h as QTc improves
  • QTc may remain prolonged for days to weeks — do not discharge prematurely
  • Cessation of CsCl is mandatory — counsel patient and family clearly that CsCl has no proven anticancer benefit and is life-threatening
  • Consider ongoing Prussian blue therapy if available
  • Follow-up with cardiology and oncology
  • All intentional ingestions: psychiatric evaluation mandatory prior to discharge
  • Contact Poison control (1-800-222-1222 in the US) for all cases

Medication Dosing

Magnesium sulfate 2g IV bolus IV

See Also

External Links

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 1.8 1.9 Sessions D, et al. Fatal Cesium Chloride Toxicity After Alternative Cancer Treatment. J Altern Complement Med. 2013;19(12):973-975. doi:10.1089/acm.2012.0731
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 Dalal AK, Harding JD, Verdino RJ. Acquired long QT syndrome and monomorphic ventricular tachycardia after alternative treatment with cesium chloride for brain cancer. Mayo Clin Proc. 2004;79(8):1065-1069.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 Pinter A, et al. Clinical effects of cesium intake. Pharmacol Res. 2014;36(1):36-44. doi:10.1016/j.phrs.2009.06.003
  4. 4.0 4.1 Toxicological Profile for Cesium. Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR). 2004.
  5. 5.0 5.1 Lyon AW, Mayhew WJ. Cesium toxicity: a case of self-treatment by alternate therapy gone awry. Ther Drug Monit. 2003;25(1):114-116.
  6. Horn S, Naidus E, Alper SL, Danziger J. Cesium-associated hypokalemia successfully treated with amiloride. Clin Kidney J. 2015;8(3):335-338. doi:10.1093/ckj/sfv017