collection
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21999405/in-vitro-suppression-of-drug-induced-methaemoglobin-formation-by-intralipid-%C3%A2-in-whole-human-blood-observations-relevant-to-the-lipid-sink-theory
#1
JOURNAL ARTICLE
T L Samuels, J W Willers, D R Uncles, R Monteiro, C Halloran, H Dai
To provide further evidence for the lipid sink theory, we have developed an in vitro model to assess the effect of Intralipid® 20% on methaemoglobin formation by drugs of varying lipid solubility. Progressively increasing Intralipid concentrations from 4 to 24 mg.ml⁻¹ suppressed methaemoglobin formation by the lipid soluble drug glyceryl trinitrate in a dose-dependent manner (p < 0.001). Both dose and timing of administration of Intralipid to blood previously incubated with glyceryl trinitrate for 10 and 40 min resulted in significant suppression of methaemoglobin formation (p < 0...
January 2012: Anaesthesia
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21981684/partition-constant-and-volume-of-distribution-as-predictors-of-clinical-efficacy-of-lipid-rescue-for-toxicological-emergencies
#2
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Deborah French, Craig Smollin, Weiming Ruan, Alicia Wong, Kenneth Drasner, Alan H B Wu
CONTEXT: Lipid infusion is useful in reversing cardiac toxicity of local anesthetics, and recent reports indicate it may be useful in resuscitation from toxicity induced by a variety of other drugs. While the mechanism behind the utility of lipid rescue remains to be fully elucidated, the predominant effect appears to be creation of a "lipid sink". OBJECTIVE: Determine whether the extraction of drugs by lipid, and hence the clinical efficacy of lipid rescue in toxicological emergencies can be predicted by specific drug properties...
November 2011: Clinical Toxicology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26031986/lesson-of-the-month-1-acute-flecainide-overdose-and-the-potential-utility-of-lipid-emulsion-therapy
#3
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Omar Mukhtar, John Rh Archer, Paul I Dargan, David M Wood
Lipid-emulsion therapy (Intralipid®) has been advocated as a potential treatment for the management of cardio-toxicity arising from lipid-soluble drugs, particularly those acting upon sodium channels. This, on the basis of a number of ex vivo studies and animal models, suggests that partitioning a drug into lipid could alter its pharmacokinetics and result in significant clinical improvements. Its subsequent use in clinical case series has been seen as confirmation of this mechanism of action. While there are undoubtedly instances where lipid emulsion therapy has been associated with a desirable outcome in humans, as described in this case report, clinicians are reminded that they should not attribute causality, on this basis alone...
June 2015: Clinical Medicine: Journal of the Royal College of Physicians of London
https://read.qxmd.com/read/20358540/liposomes-for-entrapping-local-anesthetics-a-liposome-electrokinetic-chromatographic-study
#4
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jana Lokajová, Jaana Laine, Esa Puukilainen, Mikko Ritala, Juha M Holopainen, Susanne K Wiedmer
Bupivacaine is a lipophilic, long-acting, amide class local anesthetic commonly used in clinical practice to provide local anesthesia during surgical procedures. Several cases of accidental overdose with cardiac arrest and death have been reported since bupivacaine was introduced to human use. Recent case reports have suggested that Intralipid (Fresenius Kabi) is an effective therapy for cardiac toxicity from high systemic concentrations of, e.g. bupivacaine, even though the mechanism behind the interaction is not fully clear yet...
May 2010: Electrophoresis
https://read.qxmd.com/read/26314213/effect-of-lipid-emulsion-during-resuscitation-of-a-patient-with-cardiac-arrest-after-overdose-of-chlorpromazine-and-mirtazapine
#5
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Hisatake Matsumoto, Mitsuo Ohnishi, Ryosuke Takegawa, Tomoya Hirose, Yuji Hattori, Takeshi Shimazu
No specific treatment exists for poisoning with most fat-soluble drugs. Intravenous lipid emulsion (ILE) may be effective therapy against such drugs, but effects of ILE treatment are unclear. A 24-year-old woman with depression seen sleeping in the morning was found comatose in the evening, and an emerging lifesaving technologies service was called. After emerging lifesaving technologies departure to hospital, she stopped breathing, became pulseless, and cardiopulmonary life support was started immediately...
October 2015: American Journal of Emergency Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24974371/intralipid-emulsion-treatment-as-an-antidote-in-lipophilic-drug-intoxications
#6
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sebnem Eren Cevik, Tanju Tasyurek, Ozlem Guneysel
Intravenous lipid emulsion (ILE) is a lifesaving treatment of lipophilic drug intoxications. Not only does ILE have demonstrable efficacy as an antidote to local anesthetic toxicity, it is also effective in lipophilic drug intoxications. Our case series involved 10 patients with ingestion of different types of lipophilic drugs. Intravenous lipid emulsion treatment improved Glasgow Coma Scale or blood pressure and pulse rate or both according to the drug type. Complications were observed in 2 patients (minimal change pancreatitis and probable ILE treatment-related fat infiltration in lungs)...
September 2014: American Journal of Emergency Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24945125/case-discussion-and-root-cause-analysis-bupivacaine-overdose-in-an-infant-leading-to-ventricular-tachycardia
#7
JOURNAL ARTICLE
David Buck, Renee Kreeger, James Spaeth
An otherwise healthy 11-month-old, 8-kg infant presented for an elective circumcision. After a penile block with an excessive dose of 0.5% bupivacaine, the patient progressed to ventricular tachycardia. He was resuscitated with intralipid and had an uneventful recovery. The case was classified as a serious safety event, and a team was created to perform a root cause analysis. A sequence of events was constructed from gathered data, and policies and procedures were reviewed. Proximate cause was determined to be the failure of the surgeon, anesthesiologist, nurse, and scrub technician to communicate about the maximum dose of local anesthetic allowed before the medication being drawn up...
July 2014: Anesthesia and Analgesia
https://read.qxmd.com/read/23186600/usefulness-of-intravenous-lipid-emulsion-for-cardiac-toxicity-from-cocaine-overdose
#8
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Natasha Purai Arora, William Allen Berk, Cynthia Kurke Aaron, Kim Allan Williams
The investigators describe the clinical course of a 26-year-old-man who was brought to the emergency department in a comatose state with status epilepticus after smoking a large amount of crack cocaine. In the emergency department, he was intubated because of depressed mental status and respiratory acidosis. His troponin I remained negative, and electrocardiography showed wide-complex tachycardia with a prolonged corrected QT interval. Because of the corrected QT interval prolongation and wide-complex tachycardia, the patient was started on intravenous magnesium sulfate and sodium bicarbonate...
February 1, 2013: American Journal of Cardiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22244291/-lipid-rescue-for-tricyclic-antidepressant-cardiotoxicity
#9
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Michael Stephen Blaber, Jamal Nasir Khan, Judith Anne Brebner, Rachel McColm
BACKGROUND: Tricyclic antidepressant (TCA) toxicity results predominantly from myocardial sodium-channel blockade. Subsequent ventricular dysrhythmias, myocardial depression, and hypotension cause cardiovascular collapse. Animal studies have demonstrated the effectiveness of intravenous lipid-emulsion in treating TCA cardiotoxicity. CASE REPORT: We report a case of dothiepin (tricyclic antidepressant) overdose causing refractory cardiovascular collapse, which seemed to be successfully reversed with lipid-emulsion therapy (Intralipid(®); Fresenius, Cheshire, UK)...
September 2012: Journal of Emergency Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/20367501/iatrogenic-lipid-emulsion-overdose-in-a-case-of-amlodipine-poisoning
#10
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Patrick L West, Nathanael J McKeown, Robert G Hendrickson
INTRODUCTION: Intralipid therapy has been used successfully as "rescue therapy" in several cases of overdose. We present a case of iatrogenic lipid emulsion overdose because of a dosing error. CASE REPORT: A 71-year-old female overdosed on 27 tablets of 5 mg amlodipine. Although initially stable in the Emergency Department, she became hypotensive, oliguric, and respiratory failure developed despite medical therapy. The primary treating team felt that meaningful recovery was unlikely to occur without rapid improvement in clinical status, and 12...
May 2010: Clinical Toxicology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/19282085/intravenous-fat-emulsion-therapy-for-intentional-sustained-release-verapamil-overdose
#11
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Amy C Young, Larissa I Velez, Kurt C Kleinschmidt
We report the first case of sustained-release verapamil toxicity treated with Intralipid fat emulsion (IFE). Toxicity was confirmed by elevated serial serum verapamil and metabolite, norverapamil, levels. Most previously reported cases of IFE therapy involve local anaesthetic toxicity and cardiac arrest. Our patient was in shock despite standard therapy. No adverse events were noted and the patient fully recovered.
May 2009: Resuscitation
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