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Antidote removal during haemodialysis for massive acetaminophen overdose.
- Source :
-
Clinical toxicology (Philadelphia, Pa.) [Clin Toxicol (Phila)] 2013 Nov; Vol. 51 (9), pp. 855-63. - Publication Year :
- 2013
-
Abstract
- Context: Haemodialysis is sometimes used for patients with massive acetaminophen overdose when signs of "mitochondrial paralysis" (lactic acidosis, altered mental status, hypothermia and hyperglycaemia) are present. The role of haemodialysis is debated, in part because the evidence base is weak and the endogenous clearance of acetaminophen is high. There is also concern because the antidote acetylcysteine is also dialyzable. We prospectively measured serum acetylcysteine concentrations during haemodialysis in three such cases.<br />Case Details: Three adults each presented comatose and acidemic 10 to ~18 h after ingesting > 1000mg/kg of acetaminophen. Two were hypothermic and hyperglycaemic. Serum lactate concentrations ranged from 7 mM to 12.5 mM. All three were intubated, and initial acetaminophen concentrations were as high as 5980 μM (900 μg/mL). An intravenous loading dose of 150 mg/kg acetylcysteine was initiated between 10.8 and ~18 h post ingestion, and additional doses were empirically administered during haemodialysis to compensate for possible antidote removal. A single run of 3-4 h of haemodialysis removed 10-20 g of acetaminophen (48-80% of remaining body burden), reduced serum acetaminophen concentrations by 56-84% (total clearance 3.4-7.8 mL/kg/min), accelerated native acetaminophen clearance (mean elimination half-life 580 min pre-dialysis, 120 min during and 340 min post-dialysis) and corrected acidemia. Extraction ratios of acetylcysteine across the dialysis circuit ranged from 73% to 87% (dialysance 3.0 to 5.3 mL/kg/min). All three patients recovered fully, and none developed coagulopathy or other signs of liver failure.<br />Discussion: When massive acetaminophen ingestion is accompanied by coma and lactic acidosis, emergency haemodialysis can result in rapid biochemical improvement. As expected, haemodialysis more than doubles the clearance of both acetaminophen and acetylcysteine. Because acetylcysteine dosing is largely empirical, we recommend doubling the dose during haemodialysis, with an additional half-load when dialysis exceeds 6 h.
- Subjects :
- Acetaminophen antagonists & inhibitors
Acetaminophen blood
Acetaminophen pharmacokinetics
Acetylcysteine administration & dosage
Acetylcysteine blood
Acetylcysteine therapeutic use
Acidosis, Lactic etiology
Adult
Aged
Analgesics, Non-Narcotic antagonists & inhibitors
Analgesics, Non-Narcotic blood
Analgesics, Non-Narcotic pharmacokinetics
Antidotes administration & dosage
Antidotes analysis
Antidotes therapeutic use
Coma etiology
Drug Monitoring
Drug Overdose blood
Drug Overdose drug therapy
Drug Overdose physiopathology
Female
Free Radical Scavengers administration & dosage
Free Radical Scavengers blood
Free Radical Scavengers therapeutic use
Half-Life
Humans
Liver Failure etiology
Liver Failure prevention & control
Male
Metabolic Clearance Rate
Middle Aged
Young Adult
Acetaminophen poisoning
Acetylcysteine pharmacokinetics
Analgesics, Non-Narcotic poisoning
Antidotes pharmacokinetics
Drug Overdose therapy
Free Radical Scavengers pharmacokinetics
Renal Dialysis adverse effects
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 1556-9519
- Volume :
- 51
- Issue :
- 9
- Database :
- MEDLINE
- Journal :
- Clinical toxicology (Philadelphia, Pa.)
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 24134534
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.3109/15563650.2013.844824