• Anesthesia and analgesia · Nov 2014

    Hypersensitivity Reactions to Intravenous Lipid Emulsion in Swine: Relevance for Lipid Resuscitation Studies.

    • Peter Bedocs, John Capacchione, Lauren Potts, Ryan Chugani, Zsoka Weiszhar, Janos Szebeni, and Chester C Buckenmaier.
    • From the *Defense and Veterans Center for Integrative Pain Management; †Department of Anesthesiology, Uniformed Services University; ‡Department of Anesthesiology, Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, Bethesda, Maryland; §Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, Missouri; ∥Seroscience Ltd.; ¶Nanomedicine Research and Education Center, Semmelweis University Budapest, Budapest; and #Department of Nanobiotechnology, Institute of Theoretical Health Sciences, Miskolc University, Miskolc, Hungary.
    • Anesth. Analg.. 2014 Nov 1;119(5):1094-101.

    BackgroundReports in the recent experimental literature have provided contradicting results in different animal species regarding the efficacy of IV lipid emulsion (ILE) in the reversal of cardiovascular and central nervous system symptoms of local anesthetic and other lipophilic drug overdoses. In particular, ILE seemed to be effective in rats, rabbits, dogs, and humans, but not in swine, for which it not only failed to reverse the adverse effects of anesthetics, but the animals also developed a generalized cutaneous mottling or a dusky appearance immediately after ILE, suggestive of another type of toxicity. The latter symptoms arise in complement (C) activation-related pseudoallergy, a hypersensitivity reaction to particulate drugs and agents.MethodsTen Yorkshire swine (15-20 kg) were sedated with ketamine and anesthetized with isoflurane. ILE 1.5 and 5 mL/kg 20% was administered via the ear vein while pulmonary arterial pressure, systemic arterial blood pressure, electrocardiogram, and end-tidal CO2 were recorded continuously. Thromboxane was measured in blood collected at baseline and 2 and 10 minutes after injections. Complement activation by lipid emulsion was also assessed in vitro with soluble terminal complement complex (SC5b-9) and sheep red blood cell assays.ResultsSignificant increases were observed in the pulmonary pressure (median [interquartile range]) within minutes after the administration of ILE, both at doses 1.5 and 5 mL/kg (15 [12-16.5] to 18.5 [16-20] mm Hg, P = 0.0058 and 15.5 [13-17.25] to 39.5 [30.5-48.5], respectively). The systemic arterial blood pressure increased, and the heart rate decreased after both injections. Thromboxane B2 concentration (median [interquartile range]) in the blood plasma increased from a baseline of 617.3 [412.4-920] to 1132 [597.9-1417] pg/mL (P = 0.0055) and from 1276 [1200-2581] to 4046 [2946-8442] pg/mL (P = 0.0017) after the administration of 1.5 and 5 mL/kg ILE, respectively. Intralipid did not cause in vitro complement activation in human serum.ConclusionsILE causes clinically significant hemodynamic changes in pigs, in concert with significant increases in the plasma thromboxane concentration. However, the in vitro tests did not confirm involvement of the complement system in human sera, leaving the underlying mechanism of these findings in doubt. Nonetheless, the observed hemodynamic and biochemical effects of ILE serve as a caveat that the pig is not an ideal model for the study of interventions involving ILE.

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