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Journal Article

Citation

Edwards DA, Fish SF, Lamson MJ, Lovejoy FH. Ann. Emerg. Med. 1986; 15(11): 1314-1319.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1986, American College of Emergency Physicians, Publisher Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

3777589

Abstract

A retrospective study was undertaken to determine the accuracy of predicting acetaminophen levels using the pharmacokinetic equation for first-order absorption and elimination of a single oral ingestion, (Formula: see text) Forty-four acute adult acetaminophen overdoses were studied during a 22-month period. Eighty levels drawn from 0 to 16 hours after ingestion were evaluated. To standardize the data, only first levels drawn in patients without prior spontaneous or ipecac-induced vomiting were analyzed (n = 26). Of these 26 levels, eight (31%) were drawn from 0 to two hours after ingestion, eight (31%) from two to four hours, and ten (38%) from four to 16 hours, with correlations of 0.59, 0.85, and 0.98, respectively. To determine the accuracy of predicting four-hour levels, five patients with first levels drawn at four hours, prior to vomiting, were evaluated. Substituting appropriate constants, the condensed equation, Cp4h = (0.59) (mg/kg dose), was used to predict the four-hour level (r = 0.99). Preliminary data suggest the ability to accurately predict four-hour acetaminophen levels from ingestion history alone using pharmacokinetic equations.


Language: en

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