Timely assessment of acetaminophen concentration in overdose situations is not always available in resource‐poor settings. The 150 mg/kg dose‐estimate for acetaminophen is widely considered as criterion for acetaminophen overdose. Its sensitivity and specificity when compared to the 150 mg/L treatment line on the Rumack‐Matthew Nomogram (150‐treatment line) has rarely been evaluated. This is a retrospective chart review of acute acetaminophen overdose patients. We evaluated the sensitivity and specificity of the 150, 200 mg/kg and 8‐ and 10‐g dose‐estimates by plotting the serum acetaminophen levels and using 150‐treatment line on the Nomogram as the treatment cut‐off. A comparison of medical care costs was performed. We enrolled 784 cases for analysis. Median (IQR) age was 23 (20–28) years (81.9% female). There were 545 cases (69.5%) where the estimated ingested acetaminophen dose were ≥150 mg/kg and 406 cases (51.8%) with concentrations ≥150‐treatment line. Hepatotoxicity and acute liver injury (ALI) occurred in 7.3% and 23.9%, respectively. The sensitivity and specificity of 150 mg/kg dose‐estimate for the 150‐treatment line were 92.6% (95% CI 89.6, 94.8) and 55.3% (95% CI 50.3, 60.2). Among patients with dose‐estimate below150 mg/kg, none developed hepatotoxicity and 17 (7.1%) develop ALI. The administration of activated charcoal significantly decreased the risk of being above the 150‐treatment line by half. In resource‐poor setings, the use of 150 mg/kg dose‐estimate as a stand‐alone criteria for initiation of N‐acetylcysteine therapy is satisfactory, especially when combined with decontamination with activated charcoal and follow up of aminotransferase at 24 h.
BackgroundThe 3-h high-sensitivity cardiac troponin T (hs-cTnT) algorithm is the most commonly used scheme to diagnose acute myocardial infarction. The 1-h hs-cTnT algorithm has recently been approved by the European Society of Cardiology as an alternative algorithm for earlier diagnosis. If the hs-cTnT test cannot discriminate the diagnosis of the patient at 1 h, the patient is defined as observational group. Their test must be repeated at 3 h. A high prevalence of this group may indicate a low clinical utility of the 1-h hs-cTnT algorithm. This study was aimed to estimate the proportion of the observational group in Thai emergency department (ED) patients and also the time to rule-in/out between both the algorithms.MethodsA historical control study was conducted in patients with chest pain for 1–12 h at the ED of Siriraj Hospital, Bangkok, Thailand. The study compared two groups: one prospective group of all patients evaluated with the 1-h hs-cTnT algorithm between June and September 2017 and one historical control group evaluated with the 3-h hs-cTnT algorithm between January and March 2017.ResultsA total of 130 patients were included (3-h hs-cTnT algorithm group n = 65 and 1-h hs-cTnT algorithm group n = 65). Twelve patients [18.5% (95% CI 10.0–30.1)] were categorized as observational group in the 1-h hs-cTnT algorithm group. The mean rule-in/out times in the 3-h hs-cTnT algorithm and 1-h hs-cTnT algorithm groups were 238 min (SD 63.3) and 134 min (SD 68.5), respectively (both p < 0.001). The time to disposition was also shortened in the 1-h hs-cTnT algorithm group (p < 0.001). Multivariable regression analysis performed to identify and adjust for confounders among patient characteristics revealed no significant confounders.ConclusionsThe use of the 1-h hs-cTnT algorithm in the ED resulted in an acceptable proportion in the observational group and a decreased time to rule-in/out compared with the 3-h hs-cTnT algorithm.
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