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Journal Article

Citation

Elms AR, Owen KP, Albertson TE, Sutter ME. Int. J. Emerg. Med. 2011; 4(1).

Copyright

(Copyright © 2011, Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group)

DOI

10.1186/1865-1380-4-54

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

BACKGROUND: N-acetylcysteine is used to treat acetaminophen toxicity and is available in both intravenous and oral formulations. Our report describes a patient treated with intravenous N-acetylcysteine for acetaminophen toxicity who died after an anaphylactoid reaction following initiation of the infusion.

OBJECTIVE: Clinicians should be aware of potential complications when deciding on which formulation of Nacetylcysteine to administer. Case Report: A 53-year-old male presented with altered mental status after an overdose of acetaminophen/ hydrocodone and carisoprodol. He had an acetaminophen level of 49 mcg/ml with an unknown time of ingestion. The patient was admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU) on a naloxone drip and was started on intravenous Nacetylcysteine (NAC) at the presumed dose of 150 mg/kg. Shortly after initiating the NAC infusion, the patient developed periorbital edema, skin rash, and hypotension. The infusion of N-acetylcysteine was immediately stopped and the patient required emerg nt intubation. Resuscitation was begun with intravenous fluids followed by the initiation of phenylephrine. He developed ST elevation in the inferior leads on his ECG. This evolved into an inferior myocardial infarction by ECG and cardiac enzymes. Echocardiogram showed global, severe hypokinesis with an ejection fraction of less than 20% in a patient with no pre-existing cardiac history. Despite aggressive support, he died approximately 17 hours after the initiation of intravenous NAC. Further investigation found a 10-fold formulation error in his NAC loading dose.

CONCLUSION: The intravenous formulation of NAC has a higher probability of significant adverse effects and complications not described with the oral formulation. Clinicians should be aware of these potential complications when deciding on which formulation to administer. © 2011 Yee et al; licensee Springer.


Language: en

Keywords

adult; human; naloxone; male; resuscitation; case report; suicide attempt; emergency care; disease severity; drug overdose; alcohol abuse; article; mental disease; priority journal; intensive care unit; heart infarction; acetylsalicylic acid; paracetamol; drug blood level; drug fatality; drug withdrawal; hypotension; hepatitis C; rash; sodium chloride; acetylcysteine; chronic obstructive lung disease; electrocardiogram; infusion fluid; ST segment elevation; drug infusion; heparin; respiratory tract intubation; hydrocodone; systolic blood pressure; Myocardial Infarction; anaphylaxis; hypokinesia; fluid resuscitation; carisoprodol; phenylephrine; therapeutic error; heart ejection fraction; N-acetylcysteine; troponin; periorbital edema; Anaphylactoid reaction; Dosing Error; Formulation Error; paracetamol toxicity

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