Treating paracetamol overdose by charcoal haemoperfusion and long-hours high-flux dialysis

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Abstract

After serious paracetamol overdose, charcoal haemoperfusion was used to remove paracetamol from the circulation, aiming to reduce the severity of subsequent hepatic damage. Daily long-hours high-flux dialysis was given to patients with grade III-IV hepatic encephalopathy, and also to those at risk of developing encephalopathy. We reviewed patients treated in this manner who had not received N-acetylcysteine within the first 15 h after overdose. From January 1983 to January 1993, 73 patients with serious paracetamol overdose were seen, of whom 51 received charcoal haemoperfusion and/or high-flux dialysis. Patients who were admitted within the first 42 h after overdose and who received haemoperfusion and/or dialysis had significantly lower peak levels of prothrombin time, bilirubin and creatinine than those who were admitted after 42 h. Mortality was also lower amongst patients admitted before 42 h, at 2/18 (11%) vs. 15/33 (45%), P < 0.05.

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Higgins, R. M., Goldsmith, D. J. A., MacDiarmid-Gordon, A., Taberner, D., Venning, M. C., & Ackrill, P. (1996). Treating paracetamol overdose by charcoal haemoperfusion and long-hours high-flux dialysis. QJM: An International Journal of Medicine, 89(4), 297–306. https://doi.org/10.1093/qjmed/89.4.297

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