How Safe is Prilocaine as a Local Anesthetic in Children Younger Than 2 Years of Age: A Case Series

INTRODUCTION[|]Methemoglobinemia is an urgent condition requiring early diagnosis and treatment; it may be fatal if the methemoglobin (MetHb) level is greater than 70% and tissue oxygenation is impaired. Prilocaine is a local anesthetic widely used during circumcision in children that has been assoc...

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Main Authors: Merve Güllü, Nahide Haykır, Perran Boran, Gülnur Tokuç
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: KARE Publishing 2018-05-01
Series:Southern Clinics of Istanbul Eurasia
Subjects:
Online Access:https://jag.journalagent.com/z4/download_fulltext.asp?pdir=scie&un=KEAH-79106
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author Merve Güllü
Nahide Haykır
Perran Boran
Gülnur Tokuç
author_facet Merve Güllü
Nahide Haykır
Perran Boran
Gülnur Tokuç
author_sort Merve Güllü
collection DOAJ
description INTRODUCTION[|]Methemoglobinemia is an urgent condition requiring early diagnosis and treatment; it may be fatal if the methemoglobin (MetHb) level is greater than 70% and tissue oxygenation is impaired. Prilocaine is a local anesthetic widely used during circumcision in children that has been associated with methemoglobinemia in therapeutic doses. Infants are vulnerable to hemoglobin oxidation because their cytochrome b5 reductase level is approximately 50% of adult values and fetal hemoglobin is more sensitive to oxidation than adult hemoglobin.[¤]METHODS[|]Six cases of methemoglobinemia occurring after the use of prilocaine during a circumcision are described. [¤]RESULTS[|]Six patients under the age of 2 years who had undergone prilocaine anesthesia were presented with cyanosis and a methemoglobin level of 35% to 50%. Four patients were treated with methylene blue as first-line therapy. In those 4 patients, cyanosis was resolved within 30 minutes in Case 1, an hour in Case 2, 2 hours in Case 3, and 4 hours in Case 5. In Case 3, the patient developed hemolysis following the methylene blue treatment. One patient was first treated with ascorbic acid due to a temporary shortage of methylene blue. The cyanosis improved in 1 hour and had regressed completely another hour later after a dose of methylene blue. In the final case, the cyanosis improved 30 minutes after intravenous administration of only ascorbic acid.[¤]DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION[|]All of the patients were discharged healthy. Bupivacaine may be more appropriate than prilocaine as a local anesthetic in young children due to the risk of potentially severe methemoglobinemia side effect of prilocaine.[¤]
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spelling doaj.art-017b8cdc9d6a4592b3597a716439220d2023-02-15T16:14:44ZengKARE PublishingSouthern Clinics of Istanbul Eurasia2587-09982018-05-01291636710.14744/scie.2018.79106KEAH-79106How Safe is Prilocaine as a Local Anesthetic in Children Younger Than 2 Years of Age: A Case SeriesMerve Güllü0Nahide Haykır1Perran Boran2Gülnur Tokuç3Department of Pediatrics, Osmaniye State Hospital, Osmaniye, TurkeyDepartment of Pediatrics, Kartal Dr. Lütfi Kırdar Training and Research Hospital, İstanbul, TurkeyDepartment of Pediatrics, Marmara University Faculty of Medicine, İstanbul, TurkeyDepartment of Pediatric Hematology and Oncology, Marmara University Faculty of Medicine, İstanbul, TurkeyINTRODUCTION[|]Methemoglobinemia is an urgent condition requiring early diagnosis and treatment; it may be fatal if the methemoglobin (MetHb) level is greater than 70% and tissue oxygenation is impaired. Prilocaine is a local anesthetic widely used during circumcision in children that has been associated with methemoglobinemia in therapeutic doses. Infants are vulnerable to hemoglobin oxidation because their cytochrome b5 reductase level is approximately 50% of adult values and fetal hemoglobin is more sensitive to oxidation than adult hemoglobin.[¤]METHODS[|]Six cases of methemoglobinemia occurring after the use of prilocaine during a circumcision are described. [¤]RESULTS[|]Six patients under the age of 2 years who had undergone prilocaine anesthesia were presented with cyanosis and a methemoglobin level of 35% to 50%. Four patients were treated with methylene blue as first-line therapy. In those 4 patients, cyanosis was resolved within 30 minutes in Case 1, an hour in Case 2, 2 hours in Case 3, and 4 hours in Case 5. In Case 3, the patient developed hemolysis following the methylene blue treatment. One patient was first treated with ascorbic acid due to a temporary shortage of methylene blue. The cyanosis improved in 1 hour and had regressed completely another hour later after a dose of methylene blue. In the final case, the cyanosis improved 30 minutes after intravenous administration of only ascorbic acid.[¤]DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION[|]All of the patients were discharged healthy. Bupivacaine may be more appropriate than prilocaine as a local anesthetic in young children due to the risk of potentially severe methemoglobinemia side effect of prilocaine.[¤]https://jag.journalagent.com/z4/download_fulltext.asp?pdir=scie&un=KEAH-79106circumcisionmethemoglobinemia; prilocaine.
spellingShingle Merve Güllü
Nahide Haykır
Perran Boran
Gülnur Tokuç
How Safe is Prilocaine as a Local Anesthetic in Children Younger Than 2 Years of Age: A Case Series
Southern Clinics of Istanbul Eurasia
circumcision
methemoglobinemia; prilocaine.
title How Safe is Prilocaine as a Local Anesthetic in Children Younger Than 2 Years of Age: A Case Series
title_full How Safe is Prilocaine as a Local Anesthetic in Children Younger Than 2 Years of Age: A Case Series
title_fullStr How Safe is Prilocaine as a Local Anesthetic in Children Younger Than 2 Years of Age: A Case Series
title_full_unstemmed How Safe is Prilocaine as a Local Anesthetic in Children Younger Than 2 Years of Age: A Case Series
title_short How Safe is Prilocaine as a Local Anesthetic in Children Younger Than 2 Years of Age: A Case Series
title_sort how safe is prilocaine as a local anesthetic in children younger than 2 years of age a case series
topic circumcision
methemoglobinemia; prilocaine.
url https://jag.journalagent.com/z4/download_fulltext.asp?pdir=scie&un=KEAH-79106
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