Literature DB >> 9711197

Intoxication with nitromethane-containing fuels: don't be "fueled" by the creatinine.

M E Mullins1, C A Hammett-Stabler.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: This report describes two patients exposed to nitromethane-containing fuels and the resulting laboratory abnormalities. Patient 1 ingested model airplane fuel on two separate occasions; the second patient had dermal exposure from clothing saturated with fuel in a drag racing accident. After the exposure, both patients had unusually elevated serum creatinine concentrations.
METHODS: We determined the cause of the increase in serum creatinine to be due to nitromethane interfering with the Jaffé reaction used to measure this analyte. The interference was determined by both adding increasing quantities of nitromethane to sera and remeasuring the apparent creatinine and by retesting some of the original samples using an enzyme-based creatinine method.
RESULTS: We found nitromethane, in the concentrations absorbed or ingested by the patients, increased the apparent creatinine 10- to 20-fold.
CONCLUSIONS: Nitromethane interferes with the most widely used colorimetric method used to measure creatinine. Management of this mixed poisoning should focus on the appropriate treatment for methanol toxicity. Extreme, but false, elevations of creatinine do not require hemodialysis when no other significant laboratory abnormality exists.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9711197     DOI: 10.3109/15563659809028027

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Toxicol Clin Toxicol        ISSN: 0731-3810


  3 in total

1.  Case files of the California poison control system, San Francisco division: blue thunder ingestion: methanol, nitromethane, and elevated creatinine.

Authors:  Adeline Su-Yin Ngo; Freda Rowley; Kent R Olson
Journal:  J Med Toxicol       Date:  2010-03

2.  A patient with serum creatinine of 61 mg/dl.

Authors:  S Sriram; S Srinivas; P S R Naveen
Journal:  Indian J Nephrol       Date:  2017 Jan-Feb

3.  Trending of a falsely elevated serum creatinine after a pediatric nitromethane ingestion: A case report.

Authors:  David R Derkits; William J Meggs; Jennifer L Parker Cote
Journal:  J Am Coll Emerg Physicians Open       Date:  2022-03-10
  3 in total

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