An evaluation of the role of mixing techniques in the observed variation in acetylcysteine infusion concentrations

Article date: January 2019

By: Kerry Layne, Louise Hope, Edmund Rab, John Archer, David M. Wood, Paul I. Dargan in Volume 85, Issue 1, pages 252-257

Intravenous acetylcysteine is commonly prescribed as a course of three infusions for the management of paracetamol poisoning. Previous studies have demonstrated large variation in administered doses of intravenous acetylcysteine, which has been attributed to numerous factors, including inadequate mixing of infusion bags. The aim of this study was to determine whether the amount of mixing of infusion bags contributes significantly to this variation. Using acetylcysteine doses for a 60–69 kg patient, we added the appropriate volume of acetylcysteine to 5% glucose and subsequently inverted the infusion bags 0–5 times to mix the solutions. Infusion bags were then run through using an infusion pump and acetylcysteine concentrations measured at the beginning and end of the infusions. We found no significant difference between the beginning and end concentrations of acetylcysteine regardless of whether bags were mixed or not; infusion 1 (150 mg kg−1) showed beginning and end concentrations of 44.61 and 42.48 mg ml−1 respectively after 0 mixes, whilst beginning and end concentrations were 44.45 and 44.58 mg ml−1 respectively after five mixes. The same trend was observed for infusions 2 and 3. This confirmed that mixing does not play a substantial role in variation of drug concentrations; these are likely to be caused by an accumulation of small errors in infusion preparation.

DOI: 10.1111/bcp.13800

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