Title: Cyanide and Methemoglobinemia
1Cyanide and Methemoglobinemia
- Presented by Dr. Aric Storck
- Preceptor Dr. Ingrid Vicas
- Core Rounds
- February 20, 2003
2Cyanide
3Cyanide
- Anion (CN-)
- solid and gaseous forms
- Important component of many industrial reactions
- mining - recover silver and gold from ores
- photographic - recovery of silver
- plastic manufacturing
- Naturally occurs in many plant products
- Tobacco, apricot pits
4Cyanide pollution
- 1997 - 4,513,410 cyanide released by top 100
polluters in USA - Bhopal, 1984
- worst industrial poisoning in history
- 25,000 kg methyl isocyanate and combustion
products released into atmosphere - 1,800 - 5,000 deaths
- 200,000 injuries
5Man carries his wife past the Union Carbide
factory in Bhopal, India. Fumes from the factory
killed her the previous day
Source Greenpeace
6Skulls from victims of the Union Carbide disaster
in the Hamidia Hospital in Bhopal, India.
Source Greenpeace
7Cyanide a potential disaster
- 500,000 hazardous materials shipments / day in
the USA - Average 12,115 hazardous material accidents per
year (1990-1996) - Large potential for significant industrial
accident involving cyanide
8Cyanide and terrorism
- 1984 - 7 Chicago area residents killed after
ingesting cyanide-laced Tylenol - Cyanide gas precursors (cyanide salt acid)
found in Tokyo subway bathrooms following sarin
gas attacks - Cyanide believed to be involved in World Trade
Center bombing (incinerated in attack)
9Cyanide and Fires
- Cyanide is a combustion product of
- plastic
- rugs
- silks
- furniture
- construction materials
10Cyanide and Fires
- Significant correlation between CO levels and CN-
levels in fire victims - estimated 35 of fire victims have toxic levels
of cyanide
Source Sauer S, Keim M. Hydroxocobalamin
Improved public health readiness for cyanide
disasters. Ann Emerg Med. June 2001 37635-641.
11Cyanide - Pathophysiology
- CN- has high affinity for metals
- Complexes with metallic cations at catalytic
sites of several enzymes - Binds ferric (3) iron of mitochondrial
cytochrome oxidase (cytochrome a-a3) - cytochrome a-a3 mediates transfer of electrons
to molecular oxygen (final step in oxidative
phosphorylation)
12Oxidative Phosphorylation
Source Fords Clinical Toxicology
13Blockade of oxidative phosphorylation
- Tissue anoxia
- Anaerobic metabolism
- Lactic acidosis
14Cyanide - Pathophysiology
- Other metabolic effects
- Less relevant (...because you die of anoxia
first) - Interferes with lipid metabolism
- Interferes with glycogen metabolism
15Cyanide - Poisoning
- Rapid absorption
- Respiratory tract
- Mucous membranes
- Slow absorption
- Skin
- GI tract
16Cyanide Poisoning - Inhalation
- Hydrogen cyanide
- Combustion of nitrogen containing polymers
(vinyl, polyurethane, silk) - Immediate onset of symptoms
- 50 ppm
- Symptoms after several hours
- Anxiety, SOB, palpitations, headache
- 100 ppm
- Death after 30 minutes
- 270 ppm
- Immediate coma, asystole, death
17Cyanide Ingested Salts
- Symptoms within minutes
- Caustic oral burns
- Smell of bitter almonds
- 50 mg has been reported to cause death
- LD50 140-250 mg (untreated adult)
18Ingestion Cyanide producing compounds
- Compounds require metabolic activation to produce
cyanide - Organic nitriles
- Cyanogenic glycosides
- eg amygdalin found in bitter almonds, apricot
pits - Hydrolyzed to CN in small bowel
- Not toxic if taken intravenously
- Acetonitrile (solvent in artificial nail remover)
- Oxidized by hepatic enzymes
- Delayed onset of symptoms (up to 24 hours)
19Cyanide - Dermal Exposure
20Cyanide Nitroprusside
- Deterioration in aqueous solutions releases
cyanide - Hydroxycobalamin and thiosulfate co-infusions
used in critical care settings
21Chronic Cyanide Poisoning
- Clinical relevance controversial
- Cassava contains linamarin (cyanogenic)
- Common food in many countries
- Some evidence that B12 deficiency, goiter,
demyelinating diseases may be related
22Cyanide - Detoxification
- Naturally occurs in small quantities
- tobacco
- cassava
- Small amounts routinely cleared from body
23Cyanide - Detoxification
- Cyanide thiosulfate thiocyanate
- Enzymatically
- Rhodanase
- Beta-mercaptopyruvate-cyanide sulfur transferase
- Nonenzymatically
- Sulfane-albumin complex combines with cyanide
24Cyanide - Elimination
- Thiocyanate
- Relatively non-toxic
- Renal elimination (half life 2.5 days)
25Cyanide Clinical Presentation
- Physiologic manifestations of hypoxia
- Metabolic acidosis
- Bradycardia
- Dyspnea
- CNS disturbances
- Normal pulse oximetry
26Cyanide Clinical Presentation
- CNS
- Headaches
- Drowsiness
- Dizziness
- Seizures
- Coma
27Cyanide Clinical Presentation
- Pulmonary
- Dyspnea
- Tachypnea
- Apnea
28Cyanide Poisoning - DDX
- Ingestion with altered LOC and acidosis
- sodium azide
- salicylates
- iron
- Beta-adrenergic antagonists
- cocaine
- isoniazid
- toxic alcohols
29Cyanide Poisoning - DDX
- Inhalational Exposures
- hydrogen sulfide
- carbon monoxide
- simple asphyxiants
30Cyanide Clinical Presentation
- Cardiovascular Effects
- Hypertension
- Tachycardia
- Hypotension
- Bradycardia
- Asystole
- Cardiac collapse
31Laboratory Investigation
- Electrolytes
- Elevated anion gap (lactic acidosis)
- ABG
- Metabolic acidosis (lactic acidosis)
- Normal PO2
- SaO2
- Normal
32Laboratory Investigation
- AVO2
- Decreased (decreased tissue oxygen utilization)
- Cyanide levels
- Not rapid enough for clinical utility
- Serum cyanide level
- Toxic gt0.5mg/L
- Fatal gt3.0 mg/L
- Erythrocyte cyanide level
- Normal lt1.9 uM/L (50ug/L)
- Fatal gt 40 uM/L (1mg/L)
33Laboratory Investigation
- Serum lactate elevated
- ECG
- Sinus bradycardia
- Sinus tachycardia
34Cyanide Poisoning - Sequellae
- Directly related to severity of exposure and
delay in treatment - long term sequellae are those of hypoxia
- cerebral hypoxia / encephalopathy (common)
35Cyanide - Treatment
- Monitors
- IV access
- Administer 100 O2
- Gastric lavage
- Indicated in very recent ingestion
- Activated charcoal (1g/kg)
36Cyanide Antidote Kit
Manufacturer Taylor Pharmaceuticals Cost 317
USD
37Cyanide Antidote Kit
- Contents
- Amyl nitrite 0.3 ml x 12
- Inhaled while IV access established
- Not necessary if immediate IV access
- Can be given in pre-hospital setting
- Sodium nitrite 300mg/10cc x 2
- Sodium thiosulfate 12.5g/50cc x2
- syringes, needles, tourniquet, stomach tube,
instructions
38Cyanide Antidote Kit
- Instructions
- Crush and inhale one ampoule (0.3ml) of amyl
nitrite q15-30 seconds until iv access achieved - Rapid infusion sodium nitrite 300mg
- Infuse sodium thiosulfate 12.5g over 10 minutes
- Repeat sodium nitrite and thiosulfate infusion at
half dose prn x 1 - Caution
- Sodium nitrite infusion limited by hypotension
39Cyanide Antidote Kit - Mechanism
- Nitrites
- Therapeutic induction of methemoglobinemia
- NO2 Hb MHb
- Methemoglobin binds strongly to CN- and removes
it from tissues - CN- MHB cyanomethemoglobin
- cyanomethemoglobin relatively non-toxic
40- Sodium Thiosulfate
- donates sulfur molecule to rhodanese (enzyme
which catalyzes formation of thiocyanate) - Na2S2O3 HCN O HSCN
- Synergistic effect
- Oxygen
- Synergy of 100 O2 with nitrites/thiosulfate
41CAK - Children
- 0.33 mL/kg of 3 NaNO2
- Adjust dose if anemic
- Hb 70 0.19mL/kg
- Hb 100 0.27mL/kg
- Hb 120 0.33mL/kg
- Hb 140 0.39mL/kg
- 1.65 mL/kg of 25 Na2S2O3
42Cyanide Antidote Kit
- Effectiveness
- able to detoxify 20 lethal ingested doses in dogs
- effective even after respiratory arrest as long
as no cardiac arrest - Complications
- Hypotension
- Related to vasodilatory effects of nitrites
- Methemoglobinemia
- Death reported in asymptomatic cyanide poisonings
(NB only use CAK if symptomatic poisoning)
43Cyanide Antidote Kit
- Limitations
- MHb production prevents its use in unconfirmed
cases - not practical for smoke inhalation victims (bad
idea to induce MHb when already high level of
carboxyhemoglobin) - many hospitals poorly supplied
- 81 of Tennessee hospitals unable to treat two 70
kg patients
44Cyanide other antidotes
- Hyperbaric Oxygen
- No therapeutic effect
- Useful if concomitant CO inhalation
- Dicobalt edetate
- Widely used in UK
- Effective antidote with significant toxicity
(esp. when cyanide not present)
45DMAP (4-dimethylaminophenol)
- Produces very rapid methemoglobinemia
- Used widely in Germany
- No more effective than sodium nitrite
- Less hypotension than sodium nitrite
- Linked with renal failure in animal models
46Hydroxycobalamin (vitamin B12a)
- Widely used in France
- Very effective and non-toxic
- precursor of B12 (cyanocobalamin)
- ideal choice for vegan victims of cyanide
poisoning - Recognized by FDA for cyanide poisoning
- Used in ICU settings to mitigate nitroprusside
toxicity
47- Reduces cyanide to cyanocobalamin
- B12a CN- B12
- 5g B12a will treat patients with up to 40 umol/L
- Low concentrations available in US mean very
large quantities required
48Hydroxycobalamin (vitamin B12a)
- When combined with sodium thiosulfate end product
is thiocyanate - Na2S2O3 B12 HSCN B12a
- Recycling of hydroxycobalamin
- Renally cleared
- Synergistic effect of thiosulfate and B12a
49Hydroxycobalamin (vitamin B12a)
- Advantages vs CAK
- less toxic
- does not produce MHb (thus appropriate for smoke
inhalation victims) - may be administered out of hospital
- cheaper
50Hydroxycobalamin (vitamin B12a)
- Available in Europe as Cyanokit
- 2.5 and 5.0 g doses
- very concentrated (5g/100 ml)
- in USA hydroxycobalamin available in 1mg/mL (5L
infusion required for 5g dose) - No pharmaceutical company willing to sponsor FDA
approval and development in North America
51Cyanide Poisoning - Disposition
- Symptomatic
- ICU admision until complete resolution of
metabolic acidosis - Inhalation exposure
- Discharge if asymptomatic in ED
- Cyanide Salt Ingestion
- Discharge if asymptomatic at 4 hours
- Cyanogenic glycosides / organonitriles
- 24 hours of inpatient observation for symptoms
- Suicidal patients
- Psychiatric evaluation
52Methemoglobinemia
53What is methemoglobinemia?
- Oxidation of iron within heme from Fe2 to Fe 3
- Methemoglobinemia is due to an imbalance of MHb
production and MHb reduction
54MHb - Biochemistry
- Hemoglobin tetrameric molecule
- 8 different dimers of MHb are produced when
exposed to oxidative stress
55- Oxidized (Fe3) heme cannot carry oxygen
- Allosteric changes cause non-oxidized heme to
bind oxygen more tightly - Left shift of oxygen dissociation curve
- Thus 30 methemoglobinemia has lt70 of original
oxygen carrying capacity
56- Leftward shift of Hb-Oxygen dissociation curve
- Impaired oxygen delivery to tissues
57Biochemistry, continued
- Positively charged MHb has high affinity for
negative anions (cyanide, fluoride, chloride) - Neutral Hb has high affinity for neutral ligands
(CO, O2. CO2) - .thus MHb is not particularly good at
transporting oxygen (functional anemia)
58Methemoglobinemia - etiology
- Spontaneous
- Congenital
- Transient (illness associated)
- Toxic
- Iatrogenic
59Spontaneous Methemoglobinemia
- Autooxidation of Hb
- 0.5 - 3 Hb converted to MHb each day
- Autoreduction of MHb
- 99 occurs via NADH-dependent cytochrome b5
reductase (b5r) pathway - Ascorbic acid, glutathione minor role in
reduction - Conversion of MHb to Hb is 15 per hour (assuming
no ongoing production)
60A. The NADH-dependent cytochrome b5 methemoglobin
reductase system (endogenous). B, The
NADPH-dependent methemoglobin reductase system
(therapeutic).
Source Ford Clinical Toxicology
61Congenital Methemoglobinemia
- Hemoglobin M
- rare autosomal dominant disorder
- stabilize heme iron in ferric (3) state
- death in homozygotes
- lifelong cyanosis in heterozygotes
62Congenital Methemoglobinemia
- cytochrome b5 reductase deficiency
- autosomal recessive
- lifelong cyanosis in homozygotes
- but very few symptoms due to other adaptations
- very sensitive to xenobiotic oxidizing agents
- cytochrome b5 deficiency
- very rare
- autosomal recessive
63Congenital Methemoglobinemia
- NADPH-MHb reductase deficiency
- exceedingly rare
- Does not cause MHb
- Enzyme only reduces MHb in presence of exogenous
catalyzing agent (ie methylene blue) - Patient would not respond to therapeutic
methylene blue
64The Fugates of Troublesome Creek
65Fugate pedigree with genotypes
- Congenital NADH-diaphorase deficiency
66Transient (illness-associated) Methemoglobinemia
- MHb common in septic infants with gastroenteritis
and acidosis - Infants lt6 months
- NADH-dependent reductase deficiency
- Presence of fetal Hb
- Thus infant Hb more prone to oxidative stress
- Exact mechanism poorly understood
- altered flora, RTA, low Cl, UTI, protein
intolerance .
67Toxic Methemoglobinemia
- side effect of therapeutic drugs
- environmental
- nitrates in well water
- nitrates in spinach, carrots, beets, etc.
- intentional OD
68Toxic Methemoglobinemia
- Factors influencing degree of MHb
- rate of entry of oxidant into circulation and
RBCs - rate of metabolism of toxin in body
- rate of excretion of toxin
- effectiveness of cellular MHb reduction systems
69Toxins causing MHb
- chloroquine
- dapsone
- local anaesthetics
- methylene blue
- metoclopramide
- nitrates
- nitrites
- NTG
- nitroprusside
- phenacetin
- pyridium
- primaquine
- rifampin
- sulfonamides
- vitamin K3
- chlorhexidine
70Therapeutic Methemoglobinemia
- Iatrogenic induction of MHb in cyanide poisoning
71Methemoglobinemia - Diagnosis
Chocolate brown lips
72Symptoms vs MHb concentration
MHb conc. MHb Symptoms
lt1.5 g/dL lt10 None
1.5-3.0 g/dL 10-20 Cyanotic skin
3.0-4.5 g/dL 20-30 Anxiety, lightheadedness, headache, tachycardia
4.5-7.5 g/dL 30-50 Fatigue, confusion, dizziness, tachypnea, tachycardia
7.5-10.5 g/dL 50-70 Coma, seizures, arrhythmias, acidosis
gt10.5 g/dL gt70 death
73- Chocolate-brown arterial blood
- does not become red with exposure to oxygen
- filter paper test
- place drop of blood on filter paper - MHb will
not turn red - Potassium cyanide test
- MHb turns red when CN added, sulfhemoglobin does
not
74ABG
- Measured - pH, pCO2, PO2
- Remember PO2 refers to dissolved oxygen and has
nothing to do with Hb - Calculated
- SaO2 from normal Hb-oxy dissociation curve
- Assumes all Hb is normal
- Abnormal Hb (MHb) which do not interfere with
pulmonary diffusion with falsely elevate SaO2 - Saturation gap measured calculated sats
- gt5 discrepancy suggests MHb, carboxyhemoglobin,
or sulfhemoglobin - HCO3 from Henderson-Hasselbach equation
75- Pulse oximetry
- Not accurate in MHb!!
- Only measures 2 wavelengths 660 940nm
- 100 MHb will read 85 saturation
- Co-oximetry
- Measures four wavelengths
- Maximal absorption peak at 630-631 nm (little
interference from oxyhemoglobin)
76MHb - Treatment
- Mild cases (no overt hypoxia)
- Supportive care
- Remove offending agent
- (half-life of local anaesthetic induced MHb in
normal individual 55 minutes)
77- Severe Cases
- overt hypoxia, CNS depression, CVS instability
- manage more aggressively in patients with
coexisting medical problems (CAD, etc.) - Recommend antidote for MHb gt 30 (or 20 in
symptomatic patients) - 100 oxygen
- GI/skin decontamination (charcoal, etc.)
78Methylene Blue
- Specific antidote for MHb
- 1-2 mg/kg over 5 minutes
- Repeat doses to maximum 7mg/kg
79A. The NADH-dependent cytochrome b5 methemoglobin
reductase system (endogenous). B, The
NADPH-dependent methemoglobin reductase system
(therapeutic).
Source Ford Clinical Toxicology
80Methylene Blue
- G6PD deficiency Contraindication
- Enzyme used in formation of NADPH
- Insufficient NADPH produced to reduce methylene
blue (oxidizing agent) to leukomethylene blue
(reducing agent) - Relative buildup of methylene blue (oxidizing
agent) - Can get paradoxical methemoglobinemia and
methylene blue induced hemolysis
81- Ascorbic Acid
- 300-1000mg/day iv (divided tid-qid)
- Nonenzymatic MHb reduction
- N-acetylcysteine
- Works in vitro, no in vivo studies yet
82Treatment
- Congenital MHb
- Generally asymtomatic due to compensatory
mechanisms - Methylene blue 100-300mg/day
- Ascorbic acid 200-500mg/day
- Illness associated MHb in infants
- Supportive care (hydration, etc.)
- Treat MHb gt30
83Clinical decision making in methemoglobinemia