keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21827588/the-use-of-intravenous-lipid-emulsion-as-an-antidote-in-veterinary-toxicology
#21
REVIEW
Alberto L Fernandez, Justine A Lee, Louisa Rahilly, Lynn Hovda, Ahna G Brutlag, Kristin Engebretsen
OBJECTIVE: To review the use of IV lipid emulsion (ILE) for the treatment of toxicities related to fat-soluble agents; evaluate current human and veterinary literature; and to provide proposed guidelines for the use of this emerging therapy in veterinary medicine and toxicology. DATA SOURCES: Human and veterinary medical literature. HUMAN DATA SYNTHESIS: Human data are composed mostly of case reports describing the response to treatment with ILE as variant from mild improvement to complete resolution of clinical signs, which is suspected to be due to the variability of lipid solubility of the drugs...
August 2011: Journal of Veterinary Emergency and Critical Care
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21725675/-bupivacaine-toxicity-and-propofol-anesthesia-animal-study-on-intravascular-bupivacaine-injection
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
J Mauch, A P N Kutter, O Martin Jurado, N Spielmann, A Frotzler, R Bettschart-Wolfensberger, M Weiss
BACKGROUND: Several reports have confirmed the efficacy of Intralipid® (containing soya bean oil, egg phospholipids, glycerin and water) in the therapy of systemic local anesthetic intoxication. Pretreatment with Intralipid® shifted the dose-response to bupivacaine-induced asystole in rats. Whether intravenous anesthesia with propofol in the widely used medium chain triglyceride lipid emulsion increases the therapeutic range of systemically administered bupivacaine or not is unknown and was investigated in this study...
September 2011: Der Anaesthesist
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21621362/lipid-emulsion-as-rescue-therapy-in-lamotrigine-overdose
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Diego Castanares-Zapatero, Xavier Wittebole, Vincent Huberlant, Mihaiela Morunglav, Philippe Hantson
BACKGROUND: Lamotrigine is a sodium channel blocking agent that is widely prescribed for treatment of seizure. Although life-threatening effects are rarely observed in overdose, some previous reports have described the occurrence of cardiac toxicity. The management of sodium channel blocking agent-induced cardiotoxicity conventionally requires sodium bicarbonate administration. Recent case reports describe intravenous lipid administration as a successful treatment for refractory cardiovascular collapse induced by sodium channel blocking medications...
January 2012: Journal of Emergency Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21620340/local-anesthetic-systemic-toxicity-prevention-and-treatment
#24
REVIEW
Pilar Mercado, Guy L Weinberg
Anesthesia is a sine qua non for most surgeries. Like any medical advance, progress in regional anesthesia has not come without its share of complications, including a spectrum extending from localized nerve injury to systemic cardiovascular toxicity and death. This article discusses the mechanisms and clinical presentation, prevention, treatment, and future trends of local anesthetic systemic toxicity. The adverse effects of lipid emulsion therapy are also included.
June 2011: Anesthesiology Clinics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21563913/serum-verapamil-concentrations-before-and-after-intralipid%C3%A2-therapy-during-treatment-of-an-overdose
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Deborah French, Patil Armenian, Weiming Ruan, Alicia Wong, Kenneth Drasner, Kent R Olson, Alan H B Wu
CONTEXT. Intralipid® infusion is useful in reversing cardiac and central nervous system toxicity of local anesthetic drugs, and recent reports suggest utility in other drug overdoses. CASE DETAILS. A 47-year-old man presented to the emergency department with hypotension and complete heart block 3 h after a sustained-release verapamil overdose. He was given supportive care including calcium and hyperinsulinemia/euglycemia therapy. Nineteen and 29 h post-ingestion, Intralipid® was administered as a bolus, followed by an infusion...
April 2011: Clinical Toxicology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21494132/local-anesthetic-toxicity-and-lipid-resuscitation-in-pregnancy
#26
REVIEW
Sarah Bern, Guy Weinberg
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Lipid emulsion has emerged as an effective treatment of local anesthetic-induced cardiac arrest, but its therapeutic application for the obstetric patient requires definition at present. This review discusses clinical reports, relevant laboratory studies, and future directions for the development of an optimal protocol for lipid resuscitation in pregnancy. RECENT FINDINGS: Several mechanisms have been postulated to account for the apparent enhanced sensitivity to local anesthetic systemic toxicity during pregnancy...
June 2011: Current Opinion in Anaesthesiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21263316/intractable-cardiac-arrest-due-to-lidocaine-toxicity-successfully-resuscitated-with-lipid-emulsion
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Stephanie K Dix, Gregg F Rosner, Monica Nayar, Julian J Harris, Maya E Guglin, Jeffery R Winterfield, Zhiling Xiong, Gilbert H Mudge
OBJECTIVE: Demonstrate a case report involving successful use of lipid emulsion therapy for intractable cardiac arrest due to lidocaine toxicity. DATA SOURCE: Lipid emulsion therapy has been shown to be effective in treating the cardiotoxic effects of such drugs as bupivacaine, verapamil, propranolol, and clomipramine as mentioned in a 2009 editorial in Critical Care Medicine by Jeffrey Bent. The mechanism of action of lipid emulsion therapy is not well defined and has been postulated to work by both a "lipid sink," decreasing circulating amounts of drugs to the periphery, or through a direct "energy source" to the myocardium...
April 2011: Critical Care Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21205566/limited-knowledge-of-lipid-rescue-therapy-in-local-anaesthetic-systemic-toxicity
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Peter Jensen-Gadegaard, Martin Skjønnemand, Jens Damgaard-Jensen, Bo Gottschau
INTRODUCTION: There is increasing evidence to support the use of intravenous lipid emulsion (ILE) in the management of local anaesthetic systemic toxicity (LAST) and non-local anaesthetic lipophilic-drug poisoning. This trend is supported by the Association of Anaesthetists of Great Britain and Ireland's latest guidelines on LAST treatment. Similar national guidelines have yet to be introduced in Denmark. The aim of the present study was to study the adoption of lipid rescue therapy in Denmark...
January 2011: Danish Medical Bulletin
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21200058/treatment-of-local-anesthetic-toxicity-with-lipid-emulsion-therapy
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Melissa S Burch, Russell K McAllister, Tricia A Meyer
PURPOSE: The use of lipid emulsion to treat local-anesthetic toxicity is discussed. SUMMARY: Systemic toxicity from local anesthetics is a rare but potentially fatal complication of regional anesthesia. There is increasing evidence that lipid emulsion may be an effective treatment to reverse the cardiac and neurologic effects of local-anesthetic toxicity. A literature search identified seven case reports of local-anesthetic toxicity in which lipid emulsion was used...
January 15, 2011: American Journal of Health-system Pharmacy: AJHP
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21135424/safe-use-of-local-anaesthetics-prevention-and-management-of-systemic-toxicity
#30
REVIEW
K C Lui, Y F Chow
Local anaesthetic administration is a common clinical practice not only in the operating theatres, but also in other clinical settings. Relevant monitoring and resuscitation facilities in certain clinical settings outside the operation rooms may not be optimal. Despite the low incidence of severe complications associated with administration of local anaesthetics, their safe use is very important since systemic toxicity can be fatal. This article reviews the pharmacology of local anaesthetics, clinical features of systemic toxicity resulting from their local use, and necessary preventive measures and management...
December 2010: Hong Kong Medical Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21088599/diltiazem-poisoning-treated-with-hyperinsulinemic-euglycemia-therapy-and-intravenous-lipid-emulsion
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Virginie Montiel, Thierry Gougnard, Philippe Hantson
Intravenous lipid emulsion (ILE) has been proposed as a rescue therapy for severe local anesthetic drugs toxicity, but experience is limited with other lipophilic drugs. An 18-year-old healthy woman was admitted 8 h after the voluntary ingestion of sustained-release diltiazem (3600 mg), with severe hypotension refractory to fluid therapy, calcium salts, and high-dose norepinephrine (6.66 μg/kg/min). Hyperinsulinemic euglycemia therapy was initiated and shortly after was followed by a protocol of ILE (intralipid 20%, 1...
April 2011: European Journal of Emergency Medicine: Official Journal of the European Society for Emergency Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/20977132/lipid-infusion-as-a-treatment-for-local-anesthetic-toxicity-a-literature-review
#32
REVIEW
Mihaela V Manavi
Local anesthetic toxicity can have catastrophic outcome in an otherwise benign procedure. Introduction of even a small amount of local anesthetic into the bloodstream can cause cardiac arrest in a healthy patient. Most healthcare facilities rely on standard resuscitative techniques to treat such events; however, treatment via infusion of lipid emulsion has been used successfully to stabilize the condition of some patients in a safe, effective, and rapid manner. The online databases consulted included Academic Search Premier, CINAHL, and MEDLINE...
February 2010: AANA Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/20923546/intravenous-lipid-emulsion-in-clinical-toxicology
#33
REVIEW
Leelach Rothschild, Sarah Bern, Sarah Oswald, Guy Weinberg
Intravenous lipid emulsion is an established, effective treatment for local anesthetic-induced cardiovascular collapse. The predominant theory for its mechanism of action is that by creating an expanded, intravascular lipid phase, equilibria are established that drive the offending drug from target tissues into the newly formed 'lipid sink'. Based on this hypothesis, lipid emulsion has been considered a candidate for generic reversal of toxicity caused by overdose of any lipophilic drug. Recent case reports of successful resuscitation suggest the efficacy of lipid emulsion infusion for treating non-local anesthetic overdoses across a wide spectrum of drugs: beta blockers, calcium channel blockers, parasiticides, herbicides and several varieties of psychotropic agents...
October 5, 2010: Scandinavian Journal of Trauma, Resuscitation and Emergency Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/20838075/fluid-electrolytes-and-nutrition-minutes-matter
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sarah N Taylor, James Kiger, Carolyn Finch, Darrin Bizal
Historically, in very low-birth-weight infant care, nutritional support was delayed during the first postnatal days because of fear of toxicity and harm with immature metabolic systems and intestinal function. Recent evidence demonstrates that early nutritional support is not only safe but likely necessary to optimize infant growth and neurodevelopment. In fact, nutrition management is a critical factor in very low-birth-weight infant golden hour support. Contemporary studies in protein and lipid intravenous support and early feeds as minimal enteral nutrition exhibit safety and some efficacy...
October 2010: Advances in Neonatal Care: Official Journal of the National Association of Neonatal Nurses
https://read.qxmd.com/read/20537848/-lipid-emulsions-for-the-treatment-of-systemic-local-anesthetic-toxicity-efficacy-and-limits
#35
REVIEW
A G M Aya, J Ripart, M-A Sebbane, J-E de La Coussaye
Local anaesthetic toxicity always results from rapid and important increase in their plasma concentrations. Clinically, neurologic and cardiovascular symptoms may occur, especially life-threatening cardiac arrhythmias and cardiac depression. Resuscitating patients from cardiac toxicity was known as difficult, until the introduction of lipid emulsion therapy. From experimental data, at least two mechanisms of action can be proposed, a sink-effect and an improvement of cardiomyocyte metabolism. The present article is a mini-review of the current use of lipid emulsions for the treatment of local anaesthetic cardiac toxicity...
June 2010: Annales Françaises D'anesthèsie et de Rèanimation
https://read.qxmd.com/read/20528840/effect-of-hypertonic-saline-on-electrocardiography-qrs-duration-in-rabbit-model-of-bupivacaine-toxicity-resuscitated-by-intravenous-lipid
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
G Cave, M Harvey, G Prince, D Lahner, J Desmet
Intravenous lipid emulsion is established therapy for bupivacaine induced cardiotoxicity. The benefit of combined hypertonic saline and lipid treatment is unexplored. In this experiment, sedated rabbits were resuscitated from bupivacaine-induced asystole with intravenous lipid according to the Association of Anaesthetists of Great Britain and Ireland's guideline, or by identical lipid dosing with hypertonic saline: 6 mEq x kg(-1) 21% sodium chloride. Early electrocardiography QRS prolongation was less with lipid plus hypertonic saline (mean (SD) QRS 0...
August 2010: Anaesthesia
https://read.qxmd.com/read/20490441/-lipid-emulsion-therapy-for-local-anaesthetic-toxicity-lipidrescue
#37
REVIEW
K Ott
Intoxication due to local anaesthetic drugs poses a rare but potentially life-threatening complication. In particular long-acting local anaesthetics can cause refractory cardiac arrest due to their lipophilic properties. This is often preceded by neurological symptoms such as confusion, vertigo and tonic-clonic seizures. The clinical efficacy of lipid emulsions in resuscitation from local anaesthetic toxicity has been documented in multiple publications. The injection of local anaesthetics should be stopped immediately upon the first presentation of symptoms...
June 2010: Der Anaesthesist
https://read.qxmd.com/read/20216036/treatment-of-local-anesthetic-systemic-toxicity-last
#38
REVIEW
Guy L Weinberg
Severe, systemic local anesthetic toxicity is arguably the most feared complication of regional anesthesia. A combination of old and new therapies is recommended to reduce the morbidity and mortality of symptomatic local anesthetic overdose. Prevention remains the criterion standard for improving patient safety during regional anesthesia. However, when local anesthetic toxicity occurs, considering the diagnosis is the doctor's first step to successful treatment. Preparing a plan of action ahead of time and having the necessary tools readily at hand will likewise contribute to saving the patient's life...
March 2010: Regional Anesthesia and Pain Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/19845549/intravenous-lipid-emulsion-as-antidote-beyond-local-anesthetic-toxicity-a-systematic-review
#39
REVIEW
Grant Cave, Martyn Harvey
OBJECTIVES: The objective was to asses the efficacy of lipid emulsion as antidotal therapy outside the accepted setting of local anesthetic toxicity. METHODS: Literature was accessed through PubMed, OVID (1966-February 2009), and EMBASE (1947-February 2009) using the search terms "intravenous" AND ["fat emulsion" OR "lipid emulsion" OR "Intralipid"] AND ["toxicity" OR "resuscitation" OR "rescue" OR "arrest" OR "antidote"]...
September 2009: Academic Emergency Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/19786326/intravenous-lipid-emulsions-combine-extracorporeal-blood-purification-a-novel-therapeutic-strategy-for-severe-organophosphate-poisoning
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Yaguang Zhou, Chengye Zhan, Yongsheng Li, Qiang Zhong, Hao Pan, Guangtian Yang
Organophosphorus (OP) pesticide self-poisoning is a major clinical problem in rural Asia and it results in the death of 200,000 people every year. At present, it is lack of effective methods to treat severe organophosphate poisoning. The high mortality rate lies on the amount of toxic absorption. Intravenous lipid emulsions can be used as an antidote in fat-soluble drug poisoning. The detoxification mechanism of intravenous lipid emulsions is "lipid sink", which lipid emulsions can dissolve the fat-soluble drugs and separate poison away from the sites of toxicity...
February 2010: Medical Hypotheses
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