Articles: acetaminophen.
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Expert Opin Pharmacother · Nov 2013
ReviewTramadol and acetaminophen combination for chronic non-cancer pain.
There is some evidence to support the use of tramadol in chronic non-cancer pain, especially osteoarthritis pain, but modest analgesic activity is tempered by adverse effects. Combination of a lower dose of tramadol and acetaminophen is postulated to act synergistically, potentially reducing adverse effects without reduction in analgesic efficacy. ⋯ Combination therapy with tramadol and acetaminophen reduces pain outcomes in several types of chronic non-cancer pains. However, the effect is limited and is based on short duration trials and is associated with a significant adverse effect profile. There are few data comparing other pharmacological options and also sparse evidence to confirm benefits of the putative synergism of tramadol with acetaminophen. Nevertheless, other medications used for these chronic pains also have appreciable side effects and the combination may have a role to play. Increasing incidence of tramadol-associated deaths may lead to legislative changes that could alter prescription trends of tramadol-based medication.
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Critical care medicine · Nov 2013
Character and Temporal Evolution of Apoptosis in Acetaminophen-Induced Acute Liver Failure.
To evaluate the role of hepatocellular and extrahepatic apoptosis during the evolution of acetaminophen-induced acute liver failure. ⋯ Hepatocellular apoptosis occurs in the early phases of human acetaminophen-induced acute liver failure, peaking on day 1 of hospital admission, and correlates strongly with poor outcome. Hepatic regenerative/tissue repair responses prevail during the later stages of acute liver failure where elevated levels of M30 are likely to reflect epithelial cell death in extrahepatic organs.
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Therapeutic Reviews aim to provide essential independent information for health professionals about drugs used in palliative and hospice care. Additional content is available on www.palliativedrugs.com. Country-specific books (Hospice and Palliative Care Formulary USA, and Palliative Care Formulary, British and Canadian editions) are also available and can be ordered from www.palliativedrugs.com. The series editors welcome feedback on the articles (hq@palliativedrugs.com).
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Acetaminophen (APAP) is the leading worldwide cause of drug overdose and acute liver failure (ALF). Single overdose ingestion and therapeutic misadventure may cause hepatotoxicity. Several factors, such as concomitant alcohol use or abuse, concurrent medications, genetic factors, and nutritional status, can influence the susceptibility and severity of APAP hepatotoxicity. ⋯ N-acetylcysteine is a very effective antidote when giving within 8 hours, and is also recommended after a presentation of hepatotoxicity and ALF. The prognosis of patients with APAP-induced ALF is better than other causes of ALF. Liver transplantation should be offered to those who are unlikely to survive.
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Clin Toxicol (Phila) · Nov 2013
Case ReportsAntidote removal during haemodialysis for massive acetaminophen overdose.
Haemodialysis is sometimes used for patients with massive acetaminophen overdose when signs of "mitochondrial paralysis" (lactic acidosis, altered mental status, hypothermia and hyperglycaemia) are present. The role of haemodialysis is debated, in part because the evidence base is weak and the endogenous clearance of acetaminophen is high. There is also concern because the antidote acetylcysteine is also dialyzable. We prospectively measured serum acetylcysteine concentrations during haemodialysis in three such cases. ⋯ When massive acetaminophen ingestion is accompanied by coma and lactic acidosis, emergency haemodialysis can result in rapid biochemical improvement. As expected, haemodialysis more than doubles the clearance of both acetaminophen and acetylcysteine. Because acetylcysteine dosing is largely empirical, we recommend doubling the dose during haemodialysis, with an additional half-load when dialysis exceeds 6 h.