| Literature DB >> 27099506 |
Majid Alfadhel1, Fuad Al Mutairi1, Nawal Makhseed2, Fatma Al Jasmi3, Khalid Al-Thihli4, Emtithal Al-Jishi5, Moeenaldeen AlSayed6, Zuhair N Al-Hassnan7, Fathiya Al-Murshedi4, Johannes Häberle8, Tawfeg Ben-Omran9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Hyperammonemia is a life-threatening event that can occur at any age. If treated, the early symptoms in all age groups could be reversible. If untreated, hyperammonemia could be toxic and cause irreversible brain damage to the developing brain.Entities:
Keywords: Middle East; acute management; ammonia; hyperammonemia; inborn errors of metabolism; urea cycle
Year: 2016 PMID: 27099506 PMCID: PMC4820220 DOI: 10.2147/TCRM.S93144
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ther Clin Risk Manag ISSN: 1176-6336 Impact factor: 2.423
Protocol for acute management of primary hyperammonemia based on ammonia level
| Ammonia level (μmol/L) | Undiagnosed case | Diagnosed case |
|---|---|---|
| Above upper limit of normal | • Stop protein intake | Same as Undiagnosed case |
| • Give IV glucose at an appropriate dosage to prevent catabolism ± insulin | ||
| >100 but <250 (in neonate | • Same as above | Start medications and nitrogen scavengers according to the protocol of each disorder |
| >150 but <250) | • Start drug treatment with nitrogen scavengers (L-arginine and AMMONUL®) | |
| • Start carnitine, biotin, vitamin B12 | ||
| • Start Carbaglu® | ||
| • Start lipid IV 2–3 g/kg to give higher calories | ||
| 250–500 | • Same as above | Same as Undiagnosed case |
| • Prepare for CRRT | ||
| • Begin CRRT, if no rapid drop of ammonia within 3–6 hours | ||
| >500 | Start CRRT with above measure |
Abbreviations: IV, intravenous; CRRT, continuous renal replacement therapy.
Summary of protocol of acute management of hyperammonemia
| • Basic life support (CAB) |
| • Stop all source of protein both enteral and parenteral nutrition for a maximum of 24–48 hours |
| • Check glucose level (GlucoCheck) |
| • Insert an IV line (central and peripheral) and take blood for ammonia (NH3), blood gases, Chem 1, and CBC, blood C/S (peripheral and central if patient has central line). Liver transaminases, Ca, alkaline phosphatase as STAT order |
| • Ammonia should be taken with precaution (without tourniquet, transported in ice water to the laboratory, separated within 30 minutes of collection, and analyzed immediately) |
| • Start 1.5 to double maintenance IVF as D10%, 0.45 NS + KCl 30 meq/L until serum K result is available, then adjust accordingly |
| • Call the pharmacy to prepare the medications and intralipid (see dosages in |
| • Call biochemical geneticist (metabolic) on call |
| • Consider starting insulin if hyperglycemia develops (glucose >10 mmol/L) at dose of 0.05–0.1 unit/kg/h and titrate up until blood glucose controlled (keep GlucoCheck 6.5–10 mmol/L). Total glucose requirements (mg/kg/min) depends on the age (0–1 year: 8–10, 1–3 years: 7–8, 4–6 years: 6–7, 7–12 years: 5–6, adolescent: 4–5, adults: 3–4) |
| • If ammonia >100 μmol/L in infants, children, and adults; and >150 μmol/L in neonates start loading dose of combined sodium benzoate and sodium phenylacetate (AMMONUL®) and arginine (see |
| • Start IV intralipid 20% 2–3 g/kg/day to give additional calories (if fatty acid oxidation defects are excluded) |
| • If the patient is on combined sodium benzoate and phenylacetate (AMMONUL®) or arginine give KCl 40 meq/L because they cause hyperchloremic hypokalemic metabolic acidosis. KCl can be given through peripheral line up to 60 meq/L; rate must not exceed 0.125 meq/kg/h |
| • Start dialysis if ammonia >300–500 μmol/L in neonates and children and there is no response to the medical treatment within 4 hours. Consult ICU and nephrology team if you anticipate starting dialysis in the next few hours |
| • Reloading has to be done carefully, in particular during the first 24 hours, as cumulative doses of >750 mg/kg/24 h of combined sodium benzoate and phenylacetate (AMMONUL) have been shown to be associated with development of toxicity (vomiting, lethargy). Reloading only in neonates with severe disorders or those who are undergoing dialysis, and should be spaced at least 6 hours |
| • In an undiagnosed acute case also start |
| • In an undiagnosed acute case, start levocarnitine IV/PO 100 mg/kg/day divided q 6–8 h, hydroxycobalamin 1 mg IM/IV/PO, and biotin 10 mg IV/PO |
| • Give glucose polymers, or protein-free formulas (eg, Pro-phree, Polycose, or Maxijul) through PO/NG as tolerated to give additional calories |
| • Do not decrease dextrose rate or amount and do not stop calorie delivery in the acute stage for any reason (eg, medications, fluid bolus, or hyperglycemia) as this can precipitate hypoglycemia and catabolism, which will further worsen the patient’s condition |
| • Call metabolic dietitian on call |
| • If patient has a known diagnosis, do not stop other oral chronic medications (in case of vomiting, convert to IV forms if available) |
| • Antibiotics may be started if there is any evidence of sepsis. Ammonia, electrolyte, and blood gases analysis need to be done at regular intervals during this acceleration of management stage. The frequency is dictated by the patient’s condition and the speed at which results can be obtained |
| • Protein should be reintroduced within 24–48 hours of initiation of therapy even if the patient is on dialysis |
Abbreviations: CBC, complete blood count; CAB, circulation, airway, breathing; Chem 1, Na, K, Cl, creatinine; C/S, culture and sensitivity; Ca, calcium; NAGS, N-acetylglutamate synthase; CPS1, carbamoyl phosphate synthetase 1; IVF, intravenous fluid; D10, dextrose 10%; NS, normal saline; NG, nasogastric; h, hours; IM, intramuscular; IV, intravenous; PO, peroral.
Laboratory testing that should be done in any patient suspected of having hyperammonemia
| Ammonia |
| Glucose |
| Venous/arterial blood gas |
| Electrolytes (including calcium) |
| Anion gap |
| Blood urea nitrogen |
| Creatinine |
| Liver transaminases |
| Bilirubin |
| Albumin |
| Alkaline phosphatase |
| Lactate |
| Lipase (if symptoms indicate) |
| Blood culture |
| Complete blood count |
| Acylcarnitine profile (tandem mass spectrometry), total and free carnitine |
| Plasma amino acids |
| Save a blood sample for DNA banking and DNA testing (if genotype is not known) |
| Urine ketones (healthy infants should not have any) |
| Urine organic acids (obtained within 2 hours of presentation by any method of collection) |
| Urine for orotic acid |
Medications used in acute management of hyperammonemia and their dosages
| Medications | Mechanism of action | Dosage | Route | Adverse reaction |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sodium benzoate | Conjugation with glycine to form hippuric acid | Weight ≤20 kg: 250 mg/kg as loading dose over 90 minutes followed by 250–500 mg/kg/day | IV | Cardiovascular: hypotension |
| Sodium phenylacetate | Conjugation with glutamine to form phenylacetylglutamine | Same as for Sodium benzoate | IV | Same as for Sodium benzoate |
| AMMONUL®c | Contains both sodium benzoate and sodium phenylacetate | Same as for Sodium benzoate | IV (AMMONUL® could be given through peripheral line on limited basis) | Same as for Sodium benzoate |
| L-Arginine | As an intermediate metabolite in the urea cycle. It can improve the flow through the urea cycle and thereby improves ammonia removal | 250–400 mg/kg/day as loading dose over 90 minutes followed by 250–400 mg/kg/day | IV | Hyperchloremic metabolic alkalosis, hypokalemia, elevated BUN and creatinine levels, flushing, nausea, vomiting, abdominal cramps, bloating, numbness, headache |
| Carbaglu® (carglumic acid) | Replace | 100 mg/kg bolus per NG tube, then 25–62.5 mg/kg every 6 hours | NG | Abdominal pain, diarrhea, vomiting, anemia, otitis media, tonsillitis, nasopharyngitis, fever, headache |
Notes:
It should be given through central line, however, could be given peripherally on limited basis.
If on hemodialysis/hemodiafiltration, maintenance doses should be increased to 350 mg/kg/day (or proportional increase for body surface-based dose calculation).
It is supplied as a vial of 50 mL or 5,000 mg constituted of concentrated, aqueous 10% sodium benzoate and 10% sodium phenylacetate solution. Thus, each mL provides 100 mg of sodium benzoate and 100 mg of sodium phenylacetate in water. According to the prescribing information, AMMONUL must be diluted with sterile dextrose injection, 10% at ≥25 mL/kg before administration.
It is supplied as 200 mg tablet; 5 or 60 tablets in a polypropylene bottle with polyethylene cap and desiccant unit.
Generally all the drugs are well tolerated and adverse reactions are only relevant if dosages are very high.
Abbreviations: BUN, blood urea nitrogen; IV, intravenous; NG, nasogastric; CNS, central nervous system.