STUDY OBJECTIVE: We evaluate the adsorptive capacity of a superactivated charcoal-cola mixture to acetaminophen compared with superactivated charcoal alone. METHODS: This was a triple-arm, prospective, unblinded study of 8 healthy adult human volunteers who ingested 80 mg/kg of acetaminophen. In the control arm of the study, participants ingested acetaminophen alone. In the next arm, acetaminophen was followed by 1 g/kg of superactivated charcoal mixed with water. In the final arm, acetaminophen was followed by 1 g/kg of superactivated charcoal mixed with caffeine-free diet cola. Serum acetaminophen concentrations over 6 hours for each arm were analyzed for area under the time-concentration curve (AUC), peak concentrations, and time to peak concentrations. RESULTS: AUCs were 298.5+/-82.5 mg-h/L (control), 77.1+/-85.2 mg-h/L (superactivated charcoal), and 81.3 +/- 71.8 mg-h/L (superactivated charcoal-cola). Comparison of AUCs by analysis of variance revealed mean square of 128,315.1 between treatments, and residual mean square of 6,405.0, yielding an F ratio of 20.03 (P <.0001). Student-Newman-Keuls pairwise multiple comparison procedure revealed a statistically significant difference in AUC for control versus superactivated charcoal (P <.05) and for control versus superactivated charcoal-cola (P <.05), but not for superactivated charcoal versus superactivated charcoal-cola (P >.05). Time-concentration curves for the 3 study arms were illustrated graphically. CONCLUSION: Combining superactivated charcoal with cola does not limit the adsorptive capacity of superactivated charcoal.
STUDY OBJECTIVE: We evaluate the adsorptive capacity of a superactivated charcoal-cola mixture to acetaminophen compared with superactivated charcoal alone. METHODS: This was a triple-arm, prospective, unblinded study of 8 healthy adult human volunteers who ingested 80 mg/kg of acetaminophen. In the control arm of the study, participants ingested acetaminophen alone. In the next arm, acetaminophen was followed by 1 g/kg of superactivated charcoal mixed with water. In the final arm, acetaminophen was followed by 1 g/kg of superactivated charcoal mixed with caffeine-free diet cola. Serum acetaminophen concentrations over 6 hours for each arm were analyzed for area under the time-concentration curve (AUC), peak concentrations, and time to peak concentrations. RESULTS: AUCs were 298.5+/-82.5 mg-h/L (control), 77.1+/-85.2 mg-h/L (superactivated charcoal), and 81.3 +/- 71.8 mg-h/L (superactivated charcoal-cola). Comparison of AUCs by analysis of variance revealed mean square of 128,315.1 between treatments, and residual mean square of 6,405.0, yielding an F ratio of 20.03 (P <.0001). Student-Newman-Keuls pairwise multiple comparison procedure revealed a statistically significant difference in AUC for control versus superactivated charcoal (P <.05) and for control versus superactivated charcoal-cola (P <.05), but not for superactivated charcoal versus superactivated charcoal-cola (P >.05). Time-concentration curves for the 3 study arms were illustrated graphically. CONCLUSION: Combining superactivated charcoal with cola does not limit the adsorptive capacity of superactivated charcoal.