acetaminophen (paracetamol)
pathophysiology
- Metabolism: Most is conjugated (glucuronidation/sulfation). Small amount metabolised by CYP2E1 to NAPQI (toxic).
- Toxicity: NAPQI is normally neutralised by Glutathione. In overdose, glutathione is depleted NAPQI causes hepatocyte necrosis.
clinical presentation
- Stage I (0–24h): Asymptomatic or non-specific symptoms (nausea, vomiting, pallor, diaphoresis, lethargy).
- Stage II (24–72h): RUQ pain/tenderness, hepatomegaly. Rising ALT/AST, bilirubin, and INR. Oliguria.
- Stage III (72–96h): Peak Toxicity. Jaundice, confusion (hepatic encephalopathy), marked AST/ALT elevation (> 1000 IU/L), coagulopathy, hypoglycaemia, lactic acidosis, renal failure.
- Stage IV (4d–2w): Recovery phase (hepatic regeneration) or progression to fulminant hepatic failure/death.
risk assessment
- Toxic Dose (Acute): > 200 mg/kg or > 10 g (adults).
- Note: Toxicity possible > 150 mg/kg or 7.5 g.
- High-Risk Ingestion: > 30 g OR level above the “High Risk” nomogram line.
- Risk Factors: Chronic alcohol use, malnutrition, CYP2E1 inducers (isoniazid, anticonvulsants).
investigations
- Acetaminophen Level:
- Draw 4 hours post-ingestion (levels before 4h cannot be plotted).
- Extended Release: Check at 4h. If < treatment line but > 10 mg/L (66 µmol/L), recheck 4–6h later.
- Labs: Lytes, Urea, Cr, AST, ALT, INR, Glucose, VBG (Lactate).
management
1. decontamination
- Activated Charcoal: 1 g/kg (max 50–100 g).
- Indication: Presentation within 4 hours of significant ingestion.
- May consider > 4h for massive ingestions, extended-release, or co-ingestants delaying absorption (opioids/anticholinergics).
2. n-acetylcysteine (nac)
Indications:
- Acute (< 24h): Level above Rumack-Matthew Nomogram treatment line (starts at 150 mg/L or ~1000 µmol/L at 4h).
- Repeated/Unknown Time: Treat if APAP > 10 mg/L (66 µmol/L) OR ALT elevated.
- Presentation > 24h: Evidence of liver injury or detectable APAP.
Dosing (20–21 Hour IV Protocol):
- Loading: 150 mg/kg in 200 mL D5W over 60 min.
- Maintenance 1: 50 mg/kg in 500 mL D5W over 4 hours.
- Maintenance 2: 100 mg/kg in 1000 mL D5W over 16 hours.
- Total: 300 mg/kg over 21 hours.
- Adverse Events: Flushing/urticaria (give antihistamine, slow rate). Anaphylaxis (stop, treat).
3. stopping criteria
Do not stop NAC solely based on time. Continue specific maintenance rate (e.g., 6.25 mg/kg/hr) until:
- INR < 1.3 (or normal).
- ALT < 100 U/L (or clearly declining).
- Acetaminophen undetectable (< 10 mg/L or < 66 µmol/L).
- Patient is clinically well.
4. enhanced elimination
Haemodialysis Indications:
- Massive Levels: > 900 mg/L (~6000 µmol/L) AND altered mental status or metabolic acidosis.
- Severe Acidosis: pH < 7.30 despite resuscitation.
- Renal Failure: With elevated levels.
5. liver transplantation
King’s College Criteria:
- Arterial pH < 7.3 (after fluid resuscitation).
- OR all three of:
- INR > 6.5
- Creatinine > 300 mol/L
- Encephalopathy (Grade III/IV)