Occupational methaemoglobinaemia. Mechanisms of production, features, diagnosis and management including the use of methylene blue.

Sally M Bradberry
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引用次数: 6

Abstract

Methaemoglobin is formed by oxidation of ferrous (FeII) haem to the ferric (FeIII) state and the mechanisms by which this occurs are complex. Most cases are due to one of three processes. Firstly, direct oxidation of ferrohaemoglobin, which involves the transfer of electrons from ferrous haem to the oxidising compound. This mechanism proceeds most readily in the absence of oxygen. Secondly, indirect oxidation, a process of co-oxidation which requires haemoglobin-bound oxygen and is involved, for example, in nitrite-induced methaemoglobinaemia. Thirdly, biotransformation of a chemical to an active intermediate that initiates methaemoglobin formation by a variety of mechanisms. This is the means by which most aromatic compounds, such as amino- and nitro-derivatives of benzene, produce methaemoglobin. Methaemoglobinaemia is an uncommon occupational occurrence. Aromatic compounds are responsible for most cases, their lipophilic nature and volatility facilitating absorption during dermal and inhalational exposure, the principal routes implicated in the workplace. Methaemoglobinaemia presents clinically with symptoms and signs of tissue hypoxia. Concentrations around 80% are life-threatening. Features of toxicity may develop over hours or even days when exposure, whether by inhalation or repeated skin contact, is to relatively low concentrations of inducing chemical(s). Not all features observed in patients with methaemoglobinaemia are due to methaemoglobin formation. For example, the intravascular haemolysis caused by oxidising chemicals such as chlorates poses more risk to life than the methaemoglobinaemia that such chemicals induce. If an occupational history is taken, the diagnosis of methaemoglobinaemia should be relatively straightforward. In addition, two clinical observations may help: firstly, the victim is often less unwell than one would expect from the severity of 'cyanosis' and, secondly, the 'cyanosis' is unresponsive to oxygen therapy. Pulse oximetry is unreliable in the presence of methaemoglobinaemia. Arterial blood gas analysis is mandatory in severe poisoning and reveals normal partial pressures of oxygen (pO2) and carbon dioxide (pCO2,), a normal 'calculated' haemoglobin oxygen saturation, an increased methaemoglobin concentration and possibly a metabolic acidosis. Following decontamination, high-flow oxygen should be given to maximise oxygen carriage by remaining ferrous haem. No controlled trial of the efficacy of methylene blue has been performed but clinical experience suggests that methylene blue can increase the rate of methaemoglobin conversion to haemoglobin some 6-fold. Patients with features and/or methaemoglobin concentrations of 30-50%, should be administered methylene blue 1-2 mg/kg/bodyweight intravenously (the dose depending on the severity of the features), whereas those with methaemoglobin concentrations exceeding 50% should be given methylene blue 2 mg/kg intravenously. Symptomatic improvement usually occurs within 30 minutes and a second dose of methylene blue will be required in only very severe cases or if there is evidence of ongoing methaemoglobin formation. Methylene blue is less effective or ineffective in the presence of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency since its antidotal action is dependent on nicotinamide-adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADP+). In addition, methylene blue is most effective in intact erythrocytes; efficacy is reduced in the presence of haemolysis. Moreover, in the presence of haemolysis, high dose methylene blue (20-30 mg/kg) can itself initiate methaemoglobin formation. Supplemental antioxidants such as ascorbic acid (vitamin C), N-acetylcysteine and tocopherol (vitamin E) have been used as adjuvants or alternatives to methylene blue with no confirmed benefit. Exchange transfusion may have a role in the management of severe haemolysis or in G-6-P-D deficiency associated with life-threatening methaemoglobinaemia where methylene blue is relatively contraindicated.

职业methaemoglobinaemia。亚甲基蓝的产生机理、特点、诊断和管理,包括亚甲基蓝的使用。
甲基血红蛋白是由亚铁血红素(FeII)氧化成铁(FeIII)状态形成的,其发生的机制是复杂的。大多数情况下是由于三个过程之一。首先,铁血红蛋白的直接氧化,这涉及到电子从铁血红转移到氧化化合物。这种机制在缺氧的情况下最容易进行。第二种是间接氧化,这是一种需要血红蛋白结合氧的共氧化过程,例如涉及亚硝酸盐引起的甲基血红蛋白贫血。第三,通过多种机制将化学物质转化为活性中间体,从而启动血红蛋白的形成。这是大多数芳香族化合物,如苯的氨基和硝基衍生物,产生甲基血红蛋白的方法。甲基血红蛋白血症是一种罕见的职业性疾病。芳香族化合物是大多数病例的原因,它们的亲脂性和挥发性促进了在皮肤和吸入接触过程中的吸收,这是工作场所涉及的主要途径。甲基血红蛋白血症在临床上表现为组织缺氧的症状和体征。浓度在80%左右就会危及生命。当暴露于相对低浓度的诱导化学物质时,无论是通过吸入还是反复皮肤接触,毒性特征可能在数小时甚至数天内形成。并不是所有的特征观察到患者的血红蛋白贫血是由于形成的血红蛋白。例如,由氯酸盐等氧化化学物质引起的血管内溶血比这些化学物质引起的甲基血红蛋白血症对生命的威胁更大。如果有职业病史,甲氧血红蛋白血症的诊断应该相对简单。此外,两项临床观察可能有所帮助:首先,受害者的不适程度通常低于人们对“紫绀”严重程度的预期;其次,“紫绀”对氧气治疗无反应。脉搏血氧测定在有血红蛋白血症时是不可靠的。在严重中毒时,动脉血气分析是强制性的,结果显示氧气分压(pO2)和二氧化碳分压(pCO2)正常,血红蛋白氧饱和度正常,血红蛋白浓度升高,可能是代谢性酸中毒。净化后,应给予高流量氧气,以最大限度地利用剩余的铁血红素运载氧气。尚未进行亚甲基蓝疗效的对照试验,但临床经验表明,亚甲基蓝可将甲基血红蛋白转化为血红蛋白的速率提高约6倍。特征和/或甲基血红蛋白浓度为30-50%的患者应静脉给予亚甲基蓝1- 2mg /kg/体重(剂量取决于特征的严重程度),而甲基血红蛋白浓度超过50%的患者应静脉给予亚甲基蓝2mg /kg。症状通常在30分钟内得到改善,只有在非常严重的病例或有证据表明持续形成高血红蛋白的情况下,才需要第二剂亚甲基蓝。亚甲基蓝在葡萄糖-6-磷酸脱氢酶缺乏的情况下效果较差或无效,因为它的解毒作用依赖于烟酰胺-腺嘌呤二核苷酸磷酸(NADP+)。此外,亚甲蓝对完整红细胞最有效;溶血时疗效降低。此外,在存在溶血的情况下,高剂量亚甲基蓝(20- 30mg /kg)本身可启动高血红蛋白的形成。抗坏血酸(维生素C)、n -乙酰半胱氨酸和生育酚(维生素E)等补充抗氧化剂已被用作亚甲基蓝的辅助剂或替代品,但没有证实其有益。换血可能在严重溶血或G-6-P-D缺乏与危及生命的甲基血红蛋白血症(亚甲基蓝是相对禁忌症)的治疗中发挥作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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