Unbound MEDLINE

An update of N-acetylcysteine treatment for acute acetaminophen toxicity in children. Current opinion in pediatrics. [Curr Opin Pediatr] Journal article

 
TitleAn update of N-acetylcysteine treatment for acute acetaminophen toxicity in children.
Author(s)Marzullo L 
InstitutionDivision of Pediatric Emergency Medicine, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, Alabama 35233, USA. lmarzullo@peds.uab.edu
SourceCurr Opin Pediatr 2005 Apr; 17(2):239-45.
MeSHAcetaminophen
Acetylcysteine
Acute Disease
Administration, Oral
Analgesics, Non-Narcotic
Child
Dose-Response Relationship, Drug
Exanthema
Humans
Infusions, Intravenous
Liver Diseases
Practice Guidelines
Pruritus
AbstractPURPOSE OF REVIEW: Acetaminophen poisoning accounts for a disproportionate percentage of all toxic ingestions, and can be life-threatening. This article reviews the mechanism and presentation of acetaminophen toxicity, as well as its treatment, including current thinking and treatment recommendations.
RECENT FINDINGS: N-acetylcysteine acts to detoxify acetaminophen in several ways, but primarily by increasing the synthesis and availability of glutathione, which binds and inactivates the highly reactive and hepatotoxic acetaminophen metabolite N-acetyl-p-benzoquinoneimine. The US Food and Drug Administration has approved an intravenous formulation of N-acetylcysteine, thus allowing the treatment time to be decreased from the 72 hr most commonly used for the oral regimen, to only 20 hr. This comes after many years of accepted intravenous N-acetylcysteine use in Europe and Canada, and much controversy as to the superiority of both treatments. This review summarizes this controversy, and offers a framework to develop a safe treatment plan that has the optimal outcome for the patient, as well as reflecting knowledge of the potential caveats at work. It describes side effects of N-acetylcysteine treatment, as well as relative indications to choose one route of treatment over the other.
SUMMARY: Acetaminophen can lead to irreversible liver damage and even death in acute overdose. Outcome is related to the swiftness in which the antidote (N-acetylcysteine) is provided. In the United States, there are now available both the oral and intravenous forms of N-acetylcysteine, and pros and cons exist for each. With brisk and adequate treatment using either route, recovery can be complete, and liver function can be restored.
Languageeng
Pub Type(s)Journal Article
Review
PubMed ID15800420
  
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