Identifying the cause of the “saturation gap”: Two cases of dapsone-induced methemoglobinemia

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Abstract

Diaphenylsulfone (DDS: Dapsone) is used for Pneumocystis pneumonia (PCP) prophylaxis, and methemoglobinemia has rarely been reported as a side effect of DDS. We herein report two cases of DDS-related methemoglobinemia in an 81-year-old man with organizing pneumonia and an 84-year-old woman with eosinophilic pneumonia under treatment with prednisolone. Both patients initially received trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole for PCP prophylaxis and were switched to DDS due to side effects and subsequently exhibited a clinically unexplainable decrease in SpO2. Methemoglobinemia was diagnosed based on the findings of arterial blood gas analyses. In both cases, the methemoglobinemia improved after discontinuing DDS.

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Furuta, K., Ikeo, S., Takaiwa, T., Ikeda, S., Nishiyama, A., Yokoyama, T., … Ishida, T. (2015). Identifying the cause of the “saturation gap”: Two cases of dapsone-induced methemoglobinemia. Internal Medicine, 54(13), 1639–1641. https://doi.org/10.2169/internalmedicine.54.3496

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