| Literature DB >> 28785508 |
Evon S Ereifej1,2, Seth M Meade1,2, Cara S Smith1,2, Keying Chen1,2, Nanette Kleinman1, Jeffrey R Capadona1,2.
Abstract
Published reports of status epilepticus due to intraperitoneal injection containing propylene glycol in rats are sparse. In fact, there are no reports specifying a maximum safe dose of propylene glycol through intraperitoneal administration. We report here a case of unexpected seizures in Sprague Dawley rats after receiving an intraperitoneal injection containing propylene glycol. Nine-week-old, 225-250 gram male rats were reported to experience tremor progressing to seizures within minutes after given injections of resveratrol (30 mg/kg) dissolved in a 40 : 60 propylene glycol/corn oil vehicle solution by direct intraperitoneal (IP) slow bolus injection or via a preplaced intraperitoneal catheter. The World Health Organization suggests a maximum dose of 25 mg/kg/day of propylene glycol taken orally and no more than 25 mg/dL in blood serum, whereas the animals used in our study got a calculated maximum 0.52 g/kg (25 times lower dose). Blood tests from the seizing rat support a diagnosis of hemolysis and lactic acidosis which may have led to the seizures, all of which appeared to be a consequence of the propylene glycol administration. These findings are consistent with oral and intravenous administration of propylene glycol toxicity as previously reported in other species, including humans. To our knowledge, this report represents the first published case of status epilepticus due to an IP injection containing propylene glycol.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28785508 PMCID: PMC5529644 DOI: 10.1155/2017/1757059
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vet Med Int ISSN: 2042-0048
Summary of animals described within the case report.
| Animal | Evaluation | 50% dextrose administration | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Postmortem necropsy | No | Normal, no gross abnormalities |
| 2 | Test hypothesis that seizures were due to hypoglycemia | Oral/rectal | Administration of 50% dextrose and diagnosis of hypoglycemia |
| 3 | Blood glucose test | Oral/rectal | Animals were not hypoglycemic; seizures were due to compound injected |
| 4 | Identifying component of drug, tested diluent only | Oral/rectal | Animals had seizures |
| 5 | Identifying component of drug, tested propylene glycol only | Oral/rectal | Animals had seizures |
| 6 | Identifying component of drug, tested corn oil only | No | Animals did not have seizures |
| 7 | Cardiac puncture for blood test | No | Diagnosis of hemolysis and lactic acidosis which may have led to seizures |
Summary of relevant blood test results from the cardiac puncture from one rat.
| Analyte | Results | Units | Reference range | High/low |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sodium | 137 | mmol/L | 146–151 | Low |
| Potassium | 5.6 | mmol/L | 3.8–5.6 | High |
| Magnesium | 2.6 | mg/dL | 3.8–5.5 | Low |
| Total bilirubin | 0.3 | mg/dL | 0.0–0.1 | High |
| Alanine aminotransferase | 49 | U/L | 59–166 | Low |
| Alkaline phosphatase | 205 | U/L | 232–632 | Low |
| Amylase | 399 | U/L | 545–847 | Low |
| Total protein | 5.5 | g/dL | 5.8–7.1 | Low |
| Albumin | 3.1 | g/dL | 3.2–3.7 | Low |
| Globulin | 2.4 | g/dL | 2.6–3.5 | Low |
| Cholesterol | 111 | mg/dL | 50–92 | High |
| Triglycerides | 70 | mg/dL | 101–369 | Low |
| Creatine kinase | 797 | U/L | 113–692 | High |
| Red blood cell count | 6.85 | ×106/ | 7.0–9.0 | Low |
| Hemoglobin | 13.6 | g/dL | 13.7–16.8 | Low |
| Mean corpuscular volume | 60.6 | fL | 49.9–58.3 | High |
| Mean corpuscular hemoglobin conc. | 32.8 | g/dL | 33.2–37.9 | Low |
| Red cell distribution width | 18.9 | % | 10.5–14.9 | High |
| Polychromatophilia | 3+ | N/A | N/A | Abnormal |
Figure 1Simplified chart for the metabolism of monopropylene glycol (MPG). Oxidation of propylene glycol by alcohol dehydrogenase (ALDH) leads to primarily lactate production. Epileptic-like activity results if the lactate goes into gluconeogenesis, and astrocytes convert the glucose into glycogen (adapted and summarized from [5, 15]).