The American journal of emergency medicine
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Case Reports
Severe caffeine poisoning with mexiletine successfully treated by extracorporeal methods: A case report.
A 20-year-old woman was brought to the hospital in an ambulance after ingesting 18 g of caffeine and 3500 mg of mexiletine 80 min earlier. On arrival at the emergency room, her vital signs were as follows: blood pressure, 65/37 mmHg; heart rate, 140 beats/min; and Glasgow Coma Scale, E4V4M6. Laboratory analyses revealed hypokalemia and lactic acidosis. ⋯ In this case, the endogenous clearance of caffeine, calculated from blood concentrations, was considerably lower than estimated. If HD had not been performed, it may have taken longer to wean off the VA-ECMO because of reduced caffeine clearance in the presence of mexiletine. Notably, caffeine poisoning is more severe and prolonged when mexiletine is administered.