Acetaminophen toxicity: Difference between revisions

No edit summary
(Strip excess bold)
 
(123 intermediate revisions by 21 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
<h2>Background</h2>
==Background==
<ul><li>Recommended maximum total daily dose:
*'''Most common cause of acute liver failure''' in the United States and UK
<ul><li>Adults: 3gm
*Found in >600 OTC and prescription products (Tylenol, Percocet, Vicodin, NyQuil, etc.)
</li><li>Peds: 75mg/kg
*Therapeutic dose: 10-15 mg/kg per dose (max 4g/day in adults; 2g/day in chronic alcoholics)
</li></ul>
*Toxic dose: >150 mg/kg (single ingestion) or > 7.5 g total in adults
</li><li>Toxic dose
*Mechanism:
<ul><li>&gt;10gm or &gt;200mg/kg as single ingestion or over 24hr period OR
**Normal metabolism: 90% glucuronidation/sulfation → nontoxic → renally excreted
</li><li>&gt;6gm or &gt;150mg/kg per 24hr period x2d
**~5% oxidized by CYP2E1 → NAPQI (toxic metabolite) → detoxified by glutathione
</li></ul>
**In overdose: glucuronidation/sulfation saturated → excess NAPQI production → glutathione depletion → hepatocellular necrosis
</li><li>Peak serum levels seen within 2hr
*N-acetylcysteine (NAC) is a glutathione precursor and is nearly 100% effective when given within 8 hours of ingestion<ref>Smilkstein MJ, et al. Efficacy of oral N-acetylcysteine in the treatment of acetaminophen overdose. ''N Engl J Med''. 1988;319(24):1557-1562. PMID 3059186</ref>
</li></ul>
 
<h3>The 140 Rule </h3>
===Risk Factors for Enhanced Toxicity===
<ul><li>Toxic dose is 140 mg/kg
*Chronic alcohol use (CYP2E1 induction + depleted glutathione stores)
</li><li>Give NAC if level is &gt;140 mcg/mL four hours post-ingestion
*Fasting / malnutrition (depleted glutathione)
</li><li>Initial loading dose of NAC is 140 mg/kg PO
*CYP2E1 inducers: isoniazid, phenobarbital, carbamazepine, rifampin
</li></ul>
*Lower threshold for treatment in these patients
<h3> Pathophysiology </h3>
 
<ul><li>APAP toxic metabolite NAPQI usually quickly detoxified by glutathione
==Clinical Features==
<ul><li>In overdose, glutathione runs out, NAPQI accumulates -&gt; liver injury
===Four Stages of Toxicity===
</li></ul>
*Stage 1 (0-24h): Often asymptomatic or nonspecific (nausea, vomiting, anorexia, diaphoresis)
</li><li>NAC increases availability of glutathione
*Stage 2 (24-72h): RUQ pain, elevated transaminases, rising INR; may appear to improve clinically
</li></ul>
*Stage 3 (72-96h): Peak hepatotoxicity — markedly elevated AST/ALT (can exceed 10,000), coagulopathy, [[jaundice]], [[acute kidney injury]], [[hepatic encephalopathy]]
<h2> Clinical Features </h2>
**Fulminant hepatic failure: [[cerebral edema]], [[DIC]], [[multi-organ failure]], death
<ol><li>Stage 1 (first 24hr)
*Stage 4 (4-14 days): Recovery phase in survivors (hepatocytes regenerate)
<ol><li>Mild N/V/malaise
 
</li><li>Hypokalemia (a/w high 4-hr level)
===Chronic/Repeated Supratherapeutic Ingestion===
</li></ol>
*More common than acute overdose in clinical practice
</li><li>Stage 2 (days 2-3)
*Presents with hepatotoxicity without early Stage 1 symptoms
<ol><li>Improvement in symptoms
*Rumack-Matthew nomogram does NOT apply
</li><li>RUQ abd pain
*Treat based on APAP level + ALT elevation
</li><li>Elevated transaminases
 
</li><li>Elevated bilirubin, PT (if severe)
==Differential Diagnosis==
</li></ol>
*[[Viral hepatitis]]
</li><li>Stage 3 (days 3-4)
*Alcoholic hepatitis
<ol><li>Recurrence of N/V
*Other drug-induced hepatitis
</li><li>Hepatic failure
*[[Ischemic hepatitis]] (shock liver)
</li><li>Jaundice
*[[Wilson disease]] (acute presentation)
</li><li>Coagulopathy
*Amanita phalloides (mushroom) poisoning
</li><li>Encephalopathy (esp w/ massive ingestions)
*[[Salicylate toxicity]]
</li><li>Renal failure (1-2%; usually after hepatic failure is evident)
*Other ingestions causing liver failure
</li><li>Pancreatitis (rare)
 
</li></ol>
==Evaluation==
</li><li>Stage 4 (after day 5)
*'''Serum APAP level''': draw at '''4 hours post-ingestion''' (or immediately if >4 hours)
<ol><li>Clinical improvement and recovery (7-8d) OR
**Plot on Rumack-Matthew nomogram at time since ingestion
</li><li>Deterioration to multi-organ failure and death OR
**Treatment line: starts at 150 mcg/mL at 4 hours (US uses this; original line at 200)
</li><li>Continued deterioration
**Below treatment line = low risk; above = treat with NAC
</li></ol>
*AST/ALT: may be normal initially; any elevation warrants NAC
</li></ol>
*INR/PT: coagulopathy = hepatic failure; INR is the best prognostic marker
<h2> Work-Up </h2>
*BMP: creatinine (renal injury occurs in ~25% of severe cases), bicarbonate, glucose
<ol><li>APAP level
*Lipase, bilirubin, CBC
</li><li>Chemistry
*Salicylate level (coingestion screening)
<ol><li>Metabolic acidos seen w/ extremely large ingestion
*Lactate: elevated lactate = poor prognosis
</li></ol>
*VBG/ABG: pH <7.30 after resuscitation = poor prognosis
</li><li>LFT
 
</li><li>PT/PTT/INR
===King's College Criteria (Liver Transplant Referral)===
</li><li>Acetaminophen level: 4 hours post ingestion and repeat in 4 hours
*Acetaminophen-induced ALF:
</li></ol>
**pH <7.30 after adequate fluid resuscitation (regardless of grade of encephalopathy) OR
<h2>Diagnosis</h2>
**All three: INR >6.5, creatinine >3.4 mg/dL, and Grade III-IV hepatic encephalopathy
<ol><li>APAP level
*Consider early transfer to a liver transplant center
<ol><li>Obtain 4hrs post-ingestion
 
</li><li>Obtaining multiple levels is rarely indicated in the absence of hepatotoxicity
==Management==
</li></ol>
===GI Decontamination===
</li><li>Nomogram (see below)
*Activated charcoal 1 g/kg (max 50g) if within 1-2 hours of ingestion and patient is alert with protected airway
<ol><li>Only indicated for single, acute ingestion occurring &lt;24hr prior to presentation
*May benefit up to 4 hours post-ingestion
</li></ol>
*Do NOT delay NAC for charcoal
</li></ol>
 
<h3>Rumack-Matthew Nomogram</h3>
===N-Acetylcysteine (NAC) — The Antidote===
<p><img src="/w/images/0/0f/APAP_nomogram.jpg" _fck_mw_filename="APAP nomogram.jpg" alt="" />
*Give NAC if:
</p><p><b>Make sure you use the correct units!</b>
**APAP level above treatment line on Rumack-Matthew nomogram
</p>
**Time of ingestion unknown and APAP level detectable
<h2>Treatment</h2>
**Elevated transaminases with history of APAP ingestion
<h3>&lt;4hr after ingestion</h3>
**Ingestion of > 150 mg/kg and level will not be available within 8 hours
<ol><li>GI decontamination
**Any doubt → give NAC (minimal side effects, potentially life-saving)
<ol><li><a _fcknotitle="true" href="Activated Charcoal">Activated Charcoal</a> if &lt;3 hr post-ingestion
 
</li><li><a _fcknotitle="true" href="Gastric Lavage">Gastric Lavage</a> if high-morbidity coingestants and &lt;1 hr post-ingestion
====IV NAC Protocol (21-hour Protocol — Preferred)====
</li></ol>
*Loading dose: 150 mg/kg IV in 200 mL D5W over 60 minutes (or 15 minutes if used to be over 15 min)
</li><li>Send 4hr APAP level
*Second infusion: 50 mg/kg IV in 500 mL D5W over 4 hours
<ol><li>Toxic level: Give NAC
*Third infusion: 100 mg/kg IV in 1000 mL D5W over 16 hours
</li><li>Nontoxic level: No treatment necessary
*Total: 300 mg/kg over 21 hours
</li></ol>
*Anaphylactoid reactions (flushing, urticaria, bronchospasm) most common during loading dose
</li></ol>
**Slow or pause infusion; treat with antihistamines/bronchodilators; '''do not stop NAC permanently'''
<h3>Between 4-24hr after ingestion</h3>
 
<ol><li>Send APAP level
====Oral NAC Protocol (72-hour)====
<ol><li>If level will be available within 8hr post-ingestion: wait for level before treating
*Loading dose: 140 mg/kg PO
</li><li>If level will not be available within 8hr post-ingestion: do not wait for level before treating
*Maintenance: 70 mg/kg PO every 4 hours × 17 additional doses
<ol><li>Discontinue treatment if level returns non-toxic
*Total: 1,330 mg/kg over 72 hours
</li></ol>
*Mixed with cola or juice to improve palatability
</li></ol>
*If patient vomits within 1 hour of dose, repeat the dose
</li></ol>
 
<h3>Unknown or &gt;24hr after ingestion</h3>
====Two-Bag Modified Prescott Protocol====
<ol><li>Consider GI decontamination for unknown ingestion time
*Some centers use a simplified 2-bag protocol: 200 mg/kg IV over 4 hours then 100 mg/kg IV over 16 hours
</li><li>Give 1st dose of NAC
*Lower rate of anaphylactoid reactions<ref>Wong A, et al. Comparison of two- versus three-bag IV acetylcysteine protocols. ''Clin Toxicol''. 2013;51(7):676-679.</ref>
</li><li>Send APAP level, LFT, coags
 
<ol><li>APAP level &gt;10 OR elevated transaminases? If yes then continue NAC
===When to Stop NAC===
<ol><li>pH &lt;7.3 or PT &gt;100 or Cr &gt;3.3 or AMS? If yes refer to liver transplant unit
*APAP level undetectable, AST/ALT normalizing/improving, INR ≤1.3, clinically well
</li></ol>
*If AST/ALT still elevated or INR elevated: continue NAC beyond standard protocol
</li><li>APAP level and LFT both normal? If yes then stop NAC (treatment not indicated)
 
</li></ol>
===Fulminant Hepatic Failure===
</li></ol>
*Continue IV NAC indefinitely (has benefit even in established liver failure)
<h2>N-acetylcysteine (NAC)</h2>
*Contact liver transplant center early
<ol><li>Background
*Manage: coagulopathy (FFP only if active bleeding), [[cerebral edema]] (elevate HOB, hypertonic saline, mannitol), [[hypoglycemia]], [[infection]], [[electrolyte imbalances]]
<ol><li>Almost 100% effective if given &lt;8 hr post-ingestion; less effective if 16-24 hr post-ingestion
 
<ol><li>May still be useful &gt;24 hr post-ingestion, even with fulminant hepatic failure
==Disposition==
</li></ol>
*'''Admit''' if NAC initiated, elevated transaminases, or altered mental status
</li><li>In pts who develop hepatic injury, give NAC until LFTs improve (not until APAP level is 0)
*ICU for evidence of liver failure (coagulopathy, encephalopathy, acidosis, renal failure)
</li></ol>
*Consider discharge if:
</li><li>Dosing
**APAP level below treatment line at ≥4 hours post-ingestion
<ol><li>PO:
**Normal AST/ALT, INR, creatinine
<ol><li>140mg/kg PO load
**4-6 hour observation complete
</li><li>70mg/kg PO q4hr x17 doses additional; dilute to 5% soln
**Psychiatric evaluation for intentional ingestions
</li></ol>
*Poison control: 1-800-222-1222
</li><li>IV
 
<ol><li>Loading dose: 150mg/kg in 200 mL D5W over 60min
==See Also==
</li><li>Second (maintenance) dose: 50mg/kg in 500 mL D5W over 4hr
*[[Toxicology]]
</li><li>Third dose: 100mg/kg in 1000 mL D5W over 16hr
*[[Acute liver failure]]
</li></ol>
*[[Salicylate toxicity]]
</li></ol>
*[[Hepatic encephalopathy]]
</li><li>Side-effect
 
<ol><li>PO: N/V due to sulfur-smell (may require concomitant anti-emetic)
==References==
</li><li>IV: anaphylactoid reaction
<references/>
</li></ol>
*Heard KJ. Acetylcysteine for acetaminophen poisoning. ''N Engl J Med''. 2008;359(3):285-292. PMID 18635433
</li></ol>
*Rumack BH. Acetaminophen hepatotoxicity: the first 35 years. ''J Toxicol Clin Toxicol''. 2002;40(1):3-20. PMID 11990202
<h2> Disposition </h2>
*Chun LJ, et al. Acetaminophen hepatotoxicity and acute liver failure. ''J Clin Gastroenterol''. 2009;43(4):342-349. PMID 19169150
<ul><li>Consider discharge for asymptomatic pts who do not require NAC
 
</li></ul>
[[Category:Toxicology]]
<a _fcknotitle="true" href="Category:Tox">Tox</a>
[[Category:GI]]

Latest revision as of 09:29, 22 March 2026

Background

  • Most common cause of acute liver failure in the United States and UK
  • Found in >600 OTC and prescription products (Tylenol, Percocet, Vicodin, NyQuil, etc.)
  • Therapeutic dose: 10-15 mg/kg per dose (max 4g/day in adults; 2g/day in chronic alcoholics)
  • Toxic dose: >150 mg/kg (single ingestion) or > 7.5 g total in adults
  • Mechanism:
    • Normal metabolism: 90% glucuronidation/sulfation → nontoxic → renally excreted
    • ~5% oxidized by CYP2E1 → NAPQI (toxic metabolite) → detoxified by glutathione
    • In overdose: glucuronidation/sulfation saturated → excess NAPQI production → glutathione depletion → hepatocellular necrosis
  • N-acetylcysteine (NAC) is a glutathione precursor and is nearly 100% effective when given within 8 hours of ingestion[1]

Risk Factors for Enhanced Toxicity

  • Chronic alcohol use (CYP2E1 induction + depleted glutathione stores)
  • Fasting / malnutrition (depleted glutathione)
  • CYP2E1 inducers: isoniazid, phenobarbital, carbamazepine, rifampin
  • Lower threshold for treatment in these patients

Clinical Features

Four Stages of Toxicity

  • Stage 1 (0-24h): Often asymptomatic or nonspecific (nausea, vomiting, anorexia, diaphoresis)
  • Stage 2 (24-72h): RUQ pain, elevated transaminases, rising INR; may appear to improve clinically
  • Stage 3 (72-96h): Peak hepatotoxicity — markedly elevated AST/ALT (can exceed 10,000), coagulopathy, jaundice, acute kidney injury, hepatic encephalopathy
  • Stage 4 (4-14 days): Recovery phase in survivors (hepatocytes regenerate)

Chronic/Repeated Supratherapeutic Ingestion

  • More common than acute overdose in clinical practice
  • Presents with hepatotoxicity without early Stage 1 symptoms
  • Rumack-Matthew nomogram does NOT apply
  • Treat based on APAP level + ALT elevation

Differential Diagnosis

Evaluation

  • Serum APAP level: draw at 4 hours post-ingestion (or immediately if >4 hours)
    • Plot on Rumack-Matthew nomogram at time since ingestion
    • Treatment line: starts at 150 mcg/mL at 4 hours (US uses this; original line at 200)
    • Below treatment line = low risk; above = treat with NAC
  • AST/ALT: may be normal initially; any elevation warrants NAC
  • INR/PT: coagulopathy = hepatic failure; INR is the best prognostic marker
  • BMP: creatinine (renal injury occurs in ~25% of severe cases), bicarbonate, glucose
  • Lipase, bilirubin, CBC
  • Salicylate level (coingestion screening)
  • Lactate: elevated lactate = poor prognosis
  • VBG/ABG: pH <7.30 after resuscitation = poor prognosis

King's College Criteria (Liver Transplant Referral)

  • Acetaminophen-induced ALF:
    • pH <7.30 after adequate fluid resuscitation (regardless of grade of encephalopathy) OR
    • All three: INR >6.5, creatinine >3.4 mg/dL, and Grade III-IV hepatic encephalopathy
  • Consider early transfer to a liver transplant center

Management

GI Decontamination

  • Activated charcoal 1 g/kg (max 50g) if within 1-2 hours of ingestion and patient is alert with protected airway
  • May benefit up to 4 hours post-ingestion
  • Do NOT delay NAC for charcoal

N-Acetylcysteine (NAC) — The Antidote

  • Give NAC if:
    • APAP level above treatment line on Rumack-Matthew nomogram
    • Time of ingestion unknown and APAP level detectable
    • Elevated transaminases with history of APAP ingestion
    • Ingestion of > 150 mg/kg and level will not be available within 8 hours
    • Any doubt → give NAC (minimal side effects, potentially life-saving)

IV NAC Protocol (21-hour Protocol — Preferred)

  • Loading dose: 150 mg/kg IV in 200 mL D5W over 60 minutes (or 15 minutes if used to be over 15 min)
  • Second infusion: 50 mg/kg IV in 500 mL D5W over 4 hours
  • Third infusion: 100 mg/kg IV in 1000 mL D5W over 16 hours
  • Total: 300 mg/kg over 21 hours
  • Anaphylactoid reactions (flushing, urticaria, bronchospasm) most common during loading dose
    • Slow or pause infusion; treat with antihistamines/bronchodilators; do not stop NAC permanently

Oral NAC Protocol (72-hour)

  • Loading dose: 140 mg/kg PO
  • Maintenance: 70 mg/kg PO every 4 hours × 17 additional doses
  • Total: 1,330 mg/kg over 72 hours
  • Mixed with cola or juice to improve palatability
  • If patient vomits within 1 hour of dose, repeat the dose

Two-Bag Modified Prescott Protocol

  • Some centers use a simplified 2-bag protocol: 200 mg/kg IV over 4 hours then 100 mg/kg IV over 16 hours
  • Lower rate of anaphylactoid reactions[2]

When to Stop NAC

  • APAP level undetectable, AST/ALT normalizing/improving, INR ≤1.3, clinically well
  • If AST/ALT still elevated or INR elevated: continue NAC beyond standard protocol

Fulminant Hepatic Failure

Disposition

  • Admit if NAC initiated, elevated transaminases, or altered mental status
  • ICU for evidence of liver failure (coagulopathy, encephalopathy, acidosis, renal failure)
  • Consider discharge if:
    • APAP level below treatment line at ≥4 hours post-ingestion
    • Normal AST/ALT, INR, creatinine
    • 4-6 hour observation complete
    • Psychiatric evaluation for intentional ingestions
  • Poison control: 1-800-222-1222

See Also

References

  1. Smilkstein MJ, et al. Efficacy of oral N-acetylcysteine in the treatment of acetaminophen overdose. N Engl J Med. 1988;319(24):1557-1562. PMID 3059186
  2. Wong A, et al. Comparison of two- versus three-bag IV acetylcysteine protocols. Clin Toxicol. 2013;51(7):676-679.
  • Heard KJ. Acetylcysteine for acetaminophen poisoning. N Engl J Med. 2008;359(3):285-292. PMID 18635433
  • Rumack BH. Acetaminophen hepatotoxicity: the first 35 years. J Toxicol Clin Toxicol. 2002;40(1):3-20. PMID 11990202
  • Chun LJ, et al. Acetaminophen hepatotoxicity and acute liver failure. J Clin Gastroenterol. 2009;43(4):342-349. PMID 19169150