| Literature DB >> 26997167 |
H C Pandya1, H Mulla2, M Hubbard3, R L Cordell4, P S Monks4, S Yakkundi5, J C McElnay5, A J Nunn6, M A Turner7.
Abstract
UNLABELLED: Neonates administered ethanol-containing medicines are potentially at risk of dose-dependent injury through exposure to ethanol and its metabolite, acetaldehyde. Here, we determine blood ethanol and acetaldehyde concentrations in 49 preterm infants (median birth weight = 1190 g) dosed with iron or furosemide, medicines that contain different amounts of ethanol, and in 11 control group infants (median birth weight = 1920 g) who were not on any medications. Median ethanol concentrations in neonates administered iron or furosemide were 0.33 (range = 0-4.92) mg/L, 0.39 (range = 0-72.77) mg/L and in control group infants were 0.15 (range = 0.03-5.4) mg/L. Median acetaldehyde concentrations in neonates administered iron or furosemide were 0.16 (range = 0-8.89) mg/L, 0.21 (range = 0-2.43) mg/L and in control group infants were 0.01 (range = 0-0.14) mg/L. There was no discernible relationship between blood ethanol or acetaldehyde concentrations and time after medication dose.Entities:
Keywords: Alcohol; Drug excipients; Infants
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26997167 PMCID: PMC4868857 DOI: 10.1007/s00431-016-2714-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Pediatr ISSN: 0340-6199 Impact factor: 3.183
Demographics, liver and renal function tests of neonates recruited into the study and providing blood samples. Results are from analysis of serum
| Iron and/or furosemide neonates | Control group neonates | |
|---|---|---|
| Birth weight | 1.19 (0.63–2.38) | 1.92 (0.61–3.93) |
| Gestational age at birth (days) | 193 (171–245) | 231 (171–289) |
| APGAR score | 8 (4–10) | 8 (4–10) |
| Weight at recruitment (kg) | 1.87 (1.06–3.34) | 2.05 (0.52–3.93) |
| Post-menstrual age at recruitment (days) | 247 (190–326) | 239 (174–293) |
| Post-natal age at recruitment (days) | 29 (10–94) | 10 (2–27) |
| Sampling times after last dose (hours) | 30.8 (0–321.6) | Not applicable |
| Dose of ethanol (mg)/dose of iron or furosemide | 7.24 (2.27–78.42) | Nil |
| Duration in study (days) | 28 (0–101) | 1.5 (1–5) |
| Albumin (g/dl) | 44 (18–44) | 34 (20–62) |
| Alkaline phosphatase (IU/L) | 442 (124–1312) | 313 (27–532) |
| Alanine transaminase (IU/L, ALT) | 18 (10–120) | 5 (0.4–10) |
| Bilirubin (umol/L) | 32 (2–118) | Not determined |
| Creatinine (umol/L) | 30 (19–135) | 49 (20–63) |
| Urea (mmol/L) | 4.2 (0.4–11.8) | 3.9 (1.2–6.9) |
Demographics of neonates grouped according to ethanol-containing medicine
| Iron only neonates | Iron and furosemide | Furosemide only | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gestational age at birth (days) | 200 (175–245) | 192 (171–227) | 200 (185–209) |
| Post-natal age at recruitment (days) | 30 (10–82) | 27 (12–52) | 28.5 (22–94) |
| Weight at recruitment (kg) | 2.04 (1.06–3.34) | 1.68 (1.04–3.28) | 1.58 (1.15–3.09) |
| Ethanol dose/dose of medicine (mg/kg) | 1.1 (0.7–3.9) | 6.7 (1.4–10.9) | 11.8 (9.1–14.5) |
Fig. 1Blood concentrations of ethanol (a,c) and acetaldehyde (b,d) plotted against time. Blood concentrations are related to dosing with iron (a,b) or furosemide (c,d) according to the medication the child received prior to blood sampling. There is no discernible correlation between blood ethanol (white circle and black circle) or blood acetaldehyde (white triangle and black triangle) concentrations and time after administration of iron or furosemide
Fig. 2Plots of blood ethanol vs. blood acetaldehyde concentrations in neonates receiving iron and/or furosemide. Blood concentrations are related to dosing with iron (a) or furosemide (b) according to the medication the child received prior to blood sampling. For both iron and furosemide groups, there was a weak but significant correlation between blood ethanol and blood acetaldehyde concentrations. Pearson product moment coefficient, R 2 = 0.05 and R 2 = 0.34 for iron and furosemide groups, respectively, P < 0.01 for both
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