Activated Charcoal for Pediatric Poisonings: the Universal Antidote? Robert Michael Lapus

Activated Charcoal for Pediatric Poisonings: the Universal Antidote? Robert Michael Lapus

Activated charcoal for pediatric poisonings: the universal antidote? Robert Michael Lapus Purpose of review Introduction For decades, activated charcoal has been used as a According to the American Association of Poison Control ‘universal antidote’ for the majority of poisons because of its Centers (AAPCC), in 2004, there were roughly 2.4 million ability to prevent the absorption of most toxic agents from poison exposures, 1.9 million of which were due to the gastrointestinal tract and enhance the elimination of ingestion [1]. About 93% of these occurred in the home some agents already absorbed. This manuscript will review and slightly more than half of the 2.4 million cases the history of activated charcoal, its indications, involved children less than 6 years of age. For all groups, contraindications, and the complications associated with its most cases (77%) were managed in a nonhealthcare use as reported in the literature. facility and 22.4% of cases were treated in a healthcare Recent findings facility. In children less than 6 years of age, 10.2% Recent randomized prospective studies, although with were treated in a healthcare facility. Although they small numbers, have shown no difference in length of comprise the majority of calls to the poison centers, hospital stay, morbidity, and mortality between groups who children less than 6 years of age accounted for 2.3% of received and did not receive activated charcoal. No study the documented fatalities, with 27 reported. Overall there has had sufficient numbers to satisfactorily address clinical were 1183 reported fatalities, 75% were due to toxin outcome in patients who received activated charcoal less ingestion and 77.7% were intentional [1]. Thus, poison- than 1 h following ingestion. ing still remains a significant cause of morbidity in the Summary pediatric age group. Activated charcoal has always been If used appropriately, activated charcoal has relatively low associated with treatment for poisonings, although, per- morbidity. Due to the lack of definitive studies showing a haps, this perception/practice should change based on benefit in clinical outcome, it should not be used routinely in emerging literature. ingestions. AC could be considered for patients with an intact airway who present soon after ingestion of a toxic or Activated charcoal has been used for the last century for life-threatening dose of an adsorbable toxin. The gastric decontamination. It prevents absorption of sub- appropriate use of activated charcoal should be determined stances in the gastrointestinal tract, thereby decreasing by the analysis of the relative risks and benefits of its use in systemic absorption of potentially toxic agents. In the each specific clinical scenario. past it had been referred to as ‘the universal antidote’; however, its use has been slowly declining from a peak Keywords use of 7.7% in 1995 to 5.6% in 2004. Further, more and antidote, charcoal, decontamination, ingestion, overdose, more is being reported about its adverse effect profile, poison such as the potential to lead to bowel obstruction or aspiration pneumonitis. Is charcoal truly the ‘universal Curr Opin Pediatr 19:216–222. ß 2007 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. antidote’ or will it go the way of ‘the medical anecdote’? The purpose of this article is to review the history of Division of Pediatric Emergency Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, University of activated charcoal, discuss its indications, contraindica- Alabama at Birmingham School of Medicine, Birmingham, Alabama, USA tions, and review the complications associated with its Correspondence to Robert Michael Lapus MD, Division of Pediatric Emergency Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, University of Alabama at Birmingham School use as reported in the literature. of Medicine, 1600 7th Ave South Midtown Center 205, Birmingham, AL 35233, USA History of activated charcoal in medicine Tel: +1 205 939 9587; fax: +1 205 475 4623; e-mail: [email protected] Charcoal has been used for medical purposes for thou- Current Opinion in Pediatrics 2007, 19:216–222 sands of years. The Egyptian papyri document the use of Abbreviations charcoal to 1500 BC [2]. The ancient Egyptians used ED emergency department charcoal to adsorb the odor from rotting wounds. Hindu MDAC multiple dose activated charcoal documents from 450 BC record the use of charcoal NAC N-acetylcysteine SDAC single dose activated charcoal and sand filters for the purification of drinking water. TCA tricyclic antidepressant In 400 BC, Hippocrates and Pliny used charcoal to treat epilepsy, chlorosis, and anthrax. In 157 BC, Claudius ß 2007 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins Galvanometer wrote 500 treatises, some about the 1040-8703 use of carbon for medical purposes. In 1773, Scheele 216 Copyright © Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. Unauthorized reproduction of this article is prohibited. Activated charcoal for pediatric poisonings Lapus 217 recognized the specific adsorptive powers charcoal had Table 2 Recommended dosage of activated charcoal with various gasses [2,3]. Twelve years later, Lowitz Children up to 1 year of age 10–25 g or 0.5–1.0 g/kg reviewed these properties and published accounts of Children 1–12 years of age 25–50 g or 0.5–1.0 g/kg charcoal’s ability to adsorb vapors from various chemicals. Adolescents and adults 25–100 g He is credited with the first account of charcoal’s adsorp- tive ability in the liquid phase. This led to a much cited bold demonstration by a pharmacist named Touery in properties of the charcoal formulation and the substance 1831. At a meeting at the French Academy, he ingested ingested, the volume and pH of gastric and intestinal several times the lethal dose of strychnine with equal fluid, and the presence of other agents or food adsorbed amounts of charcoal, and survived. The Academy was, by activated charcoal [7,8–11]. however, unimpressed and charcoal continued to be used more for industrial purposes [3]. Over the next several Volunteer studies suggest that SDAC is more likely to be decades, newer methods of refining and activating beneficial if given within 1 h following ingestion; how- charcoal in order to improve its adsorptive properties ever, benefit after 1 h cannot be excluded for poisons were pioneered. In 1911, ‘Eponit’, the first industrially which slow gastric motility (e.g. anticholinergic sub- produced activated charcoal, was produced in Austria. stances/drugs, opiates, salicylates) [6]. Some authors Shortly thereafter, the use of toxic gasses in World War I even suggest that activated charcoal is beneficial more served as a driving force for the mass production of than 4 h following acetaminophen overdose [12–15]. In a activated charcoal suitable for respirators [2]. It was not prospective, observational case series of 145 patients, until 1963, after Holt published a review article in the Spiller et al. [16] sought to evaluate whether adminis- Journal of Pediatrics entitled ‘The black bottle’, that tration of activated charcoal more than 4 h following activated charcoal became more widely accepted in the overdose of acetaminophen in addition to standard management of ingested toxins [4]. N-acetylcysteine (NAC) provided additional benefit over NAC alone. To measure outcome, they used hepatic Indications for activated charcoal transaminases, prothrombin time, and international Activated charcoal has been universally used to adsorb a normalized ratio (INR). There were 58 patients who variety of agents, with the exceptions of hydrocarbons, received NAC alone and 87 patients who received acids, alkalis, ethanol, and heavy metals (Table 1) [5]. It NAC and charcoal. They found that 23 patients had has been studied with hundreds of substances in vitro,in elevated transaminases greater than 1000 IU/l. Of those, animals, in human volunteers, and in actual patients with 21 patients received NAC alone and two patients overdoses. Although no controlled studies demonstrating received NAC and charcoal. This difference is statisti- changes in clinical outcome have ever been performed cally significant; however, to say whether these findings with activated charcoal, these previous data probably are are clinically significant, since all patients survived with convincing enough to warrant its use in selected cases. no reported long-term sequelae, requires further study. Interestingly, the proposed explanation for the reduction In their position paper on single dose activated charcoal in transaminases despite the late administration of (SDAC), the American Academy of Clinical Toxicology charcoal was not the interruption of the absorption of and the European Association of Poison Centres and the acetaminophen, but more of a postabsorption or Clinical Toxicologists [6] remind us that activated ‘gastrointestinal dialysis’ effect. charcoal should not be given routinely in the treatment of poisoned patients. The recommended oral dose is This explanation is similar to the mechanism behind 0.5–1 g/kg, with a maximum of 100 g (Table 2), although multiple dose activated charcoal (MDAC) which is based there is no single correct dose of activated charcoal. The on the theory that after absorption, drugs will reenter the optimum dose of activated charcoal cannot be known gut by passive diffusion if the concentration there is lower with certainty in any given patient. Optimum dosage than in the blood [17]. By administering more than two is dependant on many variables such as the physical doses of activated charcoal it is believed that a concen- tration gradient is maintained and the drug continuously Table

View Full Text

Details

  • File Type
    pdf
  • Upload Time
    -
  • Content Languages
    English
  • Upload User
    Anonymous/Not logged-in
  • File Pages
    7 Page
  • File Size
    -

Download

Channel Download Status
Express Download Enable

Copyright

We respect the copyrights and intellectual property rights of all users. All uploaded documents are either original works of the uploader or authorized works of the rightful owners.

  • Not to be reproduced or distributed without explicit permission.
  • Not used for commercial purposes outside of approved use cases.
  • Not used to infringe on the rights of the original creators.
  • If you believe any content infringes your copyright, please contact us immediately.

Support

For help with questions, suggestions, or problems, please contact us