Antimuscarinic Toxicity Safely Managed with High-Dose Transdermal Rivastigmine: A Case Report

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

2-2026

Institution/Department

Emergency Medicine; Pharmacy

Journal Title

Clinical practice and cases in emergency medicine

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Antimuscarinic toxicity, which can cause delirium and unsafe behavior, may result from an adverse effect of prescribed medications or from non-medical substance use. Physostigmine shortages have prompted use of transdermal rivastigmine for management of antimuscarinic toxicity; however, symptom control is equivocal at standard dosing. CASE REPORT: A patient with antimuscarinic toxicity was treated with physostigmine and transitioned to 26.6 milligrams/24 hours transdermal rivastigmine for sustained symptom control. He experienced no adverse effects and tolerated floor admission. DISCUSSION: There is mechanistic plausibility supporting safe, sustained control of antimuscarinic toxicity with high-dose transdermal rivastigmine. Central distribution is more rapid than serum distribution and higher doses correlate with a shorter time to peak concentration.

First Page

76

Last Page

80

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