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Management of a severe carbamazepine overdose using albumin-enhanced continuous venovenous hemodialy |
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Management
of a severe carbamazepine overdose using
albumin-enhanced continuous venovenous hemodialysis.
Askenazi
DJ, Goldstein SL, Chang IF, Elenberg E, Feig DI.
Pediatrics. 2004 Feb;113(2):406-9.
Renal
Section.
Pharmacy, Department of Pediatrics,
Baylor College
of Medicine,
Houston,
Texas.
Carbamazepine intoxication is common in the pediatric population. Highly protein-bound, carbamazepine is not removed efficiently through
conventional hemodialysis. We describe the use of
albumin-enhanced continuous venovenous hemodialysis (CVVHD) in a 10-year-old girl who developed
coma and respiratory depression due to an intentional carbamazepine overdose (peak drug level of
44.8 micro g/ml; therapeutic range: 8-12 micro g/ml). Without
intervention, the half-life of drug elimination is 25 to 60 hours in patients
who are naive to carbamazepine and 12 to 20 hours in
children on chronic carbamazepine therapy. In
contrast, with albumin-enhanced CVVHD, we observed a half-life of 7 to 8 hours.
The patient recovered rapidly and was discharged from hospital <4 days from
the time of ingestion with no complications or neurologic impairment. Because the cost-benefit analysis was
also favorable relative to other therapeutic options,
albumin-enhanced CVVHD may be the optimal treatment of toxic-level ingestion of
carbamazepine.
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