• J. Toxicol. Clin. Toxicol. · Jan 1999

    Multicenter Study Clinical Trial

    Effect of metoclopramide dose on preventing emesis after oral administration of N-acetylcysteine for acetaminophen overdose.

    • R O Wright, A C Anderson, S L Lesko, A D Woolf, J G Linakis, and W J Lewander.
    • Hasbro Children's Hospital, Brown University Medical School, Providence, Rhode Island, USA. rwright@rihosp.edu
    • J. Toxicol. Clin. Toxicol. 1999 Jan 1;37(1):35-42.

    ObjectiveTo determine the effect of the metoclopramide dose on the prevention of vomiting of N-acetylcysteine in acetaminophen overdose.MethodsPatients with acetaminophen ingestions receiving metoclopramide prior to emergency department administration of N-acetylcysteine were included. Emergency Department and poison center records were reviewed for administration of metoclopramide pre-N-acetylcysteine and incidence of subsequent vomiting. The treatment group was defined as patients receiving high-dose metoclopramide (20-50 mg intravenously) prior to the loading dose of N-acetylcysteine. Controls were patients receiving standard-dose (< 20 mg intravenously) metoclopramide prior to loading dose of N-acetylcysteine. Outcome was vomiting within 60 minutes of N-acetylcysteine administration.ResultsTwelve of 19 patients (63%) receiving standard-dose metoclopramide vomited N-acetylcysteine. Only 5 of 23 patients (22%) receiving high-dose metoclopramide vomited N-acetylcysteine (crude odds ratio: 6.2; 95% CI [1.3-30.3]). After controlling for confounding in the logistic regression model, the effect of high-dose metoclopramide in preventing vomiting of N-acetylcysteine remained significant (adjusted odds ratio: 17.0; 95% CI [2.6-110.0]).ConclusionThis study supports the efficacy of high-dose metoclopramide to prevent emesis after the oral loading dose of N-acetylcysteine.

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