口服活性炭在中毒治疗中的应用。单次和重复给药的作用。

P J Neuvonen, K T Olkkola
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引用次数: 171

摘要

活性炭具有吸附多种物质的能力。这种特性可用于防止胃肠道吸收各种药物和毒素,并增加其消除,甚至在全身吸收后。单次口服活性炭有效地防止胃肠道吸收木炭施用时胃中存在的大多数药物和毒素。已知的例外是醇类、氰化物以及铁和锂等金属。一般来说,活性炭比胃排空更有效。但是,如果摄取的药物或毒物量很大,或者对木炭的亲和力较差,活性炭的吸附能力就会饱和。在这种情况下,适当进行胃排空可能比单独使用木炭更有效。重复给药口服活性炭可增强许多毒理学上重要的药物的消除,如阿司匹林、卡马西平、氨苯砜、右丙氧基苯、心脏糖苷、甲丙酸酯、苯巴比妥、苯妥英和茶碱。它还加速了许多工业和环境毒物的消除。急性中毒时,成人患者应尽快给予50 ~ 100g活性炭(儿童约1 g/kg)。例外情况是病人被烧碱或酸中毒,会立即造成局部组织损伤。为了避免木炭管理的延误,活性炭应该是家庭和工作中急救箱的一部分。木炭的“盲”施用既不能阻止后来的胃排空,也不会引起严重的不良反应,只要防止晕厥患者的肺误吸。在严重急性中毒中,应反复口服活性炭,例如每隔4至6小时给药20至50g,直至恢复或血浆药物浓度降至无毒水平。除了增加许多药物和毒素在全身吸收后的消除,重复剂量的木炭还可以降低炭-毒素复合物通过胃肠道时解吸的风险。木炭不会增加所有物质的消除。然而,由于急性中毒的用药史往往不可靠,除非毒理学实验室确定病原体不易被木炭吸附,否则在严重中毒时重复服用口服活性炭似乎是合理的。重复剂量口服活性炭在慢性中毒中的作用尚未明确界定。(摘要删节为400字)
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Oral activated charcoal in the treatment of intoxications. Role of single and repeated doses.

Activated charcoal has an ability to adsorb a wide variety of substances. This property can be applied to prevent the gastrointestinal absorption of various drugs and toxins and to increase their elimination, even after systemic absorption. Single doses of oral activated charcoal effectively prevent the gastrointestinal absorption of most drugs and toxins present in the stomach at the time of charcoal administration. Known exceptions are alcohols, cyanide, and metals such as iron and lithium. In general, activated charcoal is more effective than gastric emptying. However, if the amount of drug or poison ingested is very large or if its affinity to charcoal is poor, the adsorption capacity of activated charcoal can be saturated. In such cases properly performed gastric emptying is likely to be more effective than charcoal alone. Repeated dosing with oral activated charcoal enhances the elimination of many toxicologically significant agents, e.g. aspirin, carbamazepine, dapsone, dextropropoxyphene, cardiac glycosides, meprobamate, phenobarbitone, phenytoin and theophylline. It also accelerates the elimination of many industrial and environmental intoxicants. In acute intoxications 50 to 100g activated charcoal should be administered to adult patients (to children, about 1 g/kg) as soon as possible. The exceptions are patients poisoned with caustic alkalis or acids which will immediately cause local tissue damages. To avoid delays in charcoal administration, activated charcoal should be a part of first-aid kits both at home and at work. The 'blind' administration of charcoal neither prevents later gastric emptying nor does it cause serious adverse effects provided that pulmonary aspiration in obtunded patients is prevented. In severe acute poisonings oral activated charcoal should be administered repeatedly, e.g. 20 to 50g at intervals of 4 to 6 hours, until recovery or until plasma drug concentrations have fallen to non-toxic levels. In addition to increasing the elimination of many drugs and toxins even after their systemic absorption, repeated doses of charcoal also reduce the risk of desorbing from the charcoal-toxin complex as the complex passes through the gastrointestinal tract. Charcoal will not increase the elimination of all substances taken. However, as the drug history in acute intoxications is often unreliable, repeated doses of oral activated charcoal in severe intoxications seem to be justified unless the toxicological laboratory has identified the causative agent as not being prone to adsorption by charcoal. The role of repeated doses of oral activated charcoal in chronic intoxication has not been clearly defined.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)

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