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Methemoglobinemia



Methemoglobinemia
Classification & external resources
ICD-10 D74.
ICD-9 289.7
DiseasesDB 8100
eMedicine med/1466  emerg/313
MeSH D008708

Methemoglobinemia, also known as "met-Hb", is a disorder characterized by the presence of a higher than normal level of methemoglobin in the blood. Methemoglobin is a form of hemoglobin that does not bind oxygen. When its concentration is elevated in red blood cells a functional anemia and tissue hypoxia may occur. Normally methemoglobin levels are <1%, as measured by the co-oximetry test. Elevated levels of methemoglobin in the blood are caused when the mechanisms that defend against oxidative stress within the red blood cell are overwhelmed and the oxygen carrying ferrous ion (Fe2+) of the heme group of the hemoglobin molecule is oxidized to the ferric state (Fe3+). This converts hemoglobin to methemoglobin, a non-oxygen binding form of hemoglobin that binds a water molecule instead of oxygen. Spontaneous formation of methemoglobin is normally counteracted by protective enzyme systems: NADH methemoglobin reductase (cytochrome-b5 reductase) (major pathway), NADPH methemoglobin reductase (minor pathway) and to a lesser extent the ascorbic acid and glutathione enzyme systems.

Contents

Types

Congenital methemoglobinemia

Due to a deficiency of the enzyme diaphorase I (NADH methemoglobin reductase), methemoglobin levels rise and the blood of met-Hb sufferers has reduced oxygen-carrying capacity. Instead of being red in colour, the arterial blood of met-Hb sufferers is brown. This results in skin of white sufferers gaining a bluish cast (thus making them "blue people"). Hereditary met-Hb is caused by a recessive gene. If only one parent has this gene, offspring will have normal-hued skin, but, if both parents carry the gene there is a chance the offspring will have blue-hued skin.

Another cause of congenital methemoglobinemia is seen in patients with abnormal hemoglobin variants such as hemoglobin M (HbM), or hemoglobin H (HbH), which are not amenable to reduction despite intact enzyme systems.

Methemoglobinemia can also arise in patients with pyruvate kinase deficiency due to impaired production of NADH - the essential cofactor for diaphorase I. Similarly, patients with Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency may have impaired production of another co-factor, NADPH.

Acquired/Toxic methemoglobinemia

Methemoglobinemia can also be acquired.[1] The protective enzyme systems normally present in red blood cells maintain methemoglobin levels at less than one percent of the total hemoglobin in healthy people. Exposure to exogenous oxidizing drugs and their metabolites (such as benzocaine, dapsone and nitrates) may accelerate the rate of formation of methemoglobin up to one-thousandfold, overwhelming the protective enzyme systems and acutely increasing methemoglobin levels. Other classical drug causes of methemoglobinaemia include antibiotics (trimethoprim, sulphonamides and dapsone[2]), local anaesthetics (especially lignocaine and prilocaine[3]), and others such as aniline dyes, metoclopramide, chlorates and bromates. Ingestion of compounds containing nitrates (such as the patina chemical bismuth nitrate)can also cause methmemoglobinemia.

Infants under 6 months of age are particularly susceptible to methemoglobinemia caused by nitrates ingested in drinking water, dehydration usually caused by gastroenteritis with diarrhea, sepsis and topical anesthetics containing benzocaine or prilocaine. Nitrates that are used in agricultural fertilizers leaked into the ground and may contaminate well water. The current EPA standard of 10 ppm nitrate-nitrogen for drinking water is specifically designed to protect infants.

Treatment

Methemoglobinemia can be treated with supplemental oxygen and methylene blue[4] 1% solution (10mg/ml) 1-2mg/kg administered intravenously slowly over five minutes followed by IV flush with normal saline. Methylene blue restores the iron in hemoglobin to its normal (reduced) oxygen-carrying state. This is achieved through the enzyme inducing effect of methylene blue on levels of diaphorase II (NADPH methemoglobin reductase). Diaphorase II normally contributes only a small percentage of the red blood cells reducing capacity but is pharmacologically activated by exogenous cofactors, such as methylene blue, to 5 times its normal level of activity. Genetically induced chronic low-level methemoglobinemia may be treated with oral methylene blue daily.

Symptoms

Signs and symptoms of methemoglobinemia (methemoglobin >1%) include shortness of breath, cyanosis, mental status changes, headache, fatigue, exercise intolerance, dizziness and loss of consciousness. Arterial blood with elevated methemoglobin levels has a characteristic chocolate-brown color as compared to normal bright red oxygen containing arterial blood.

Severe methemoglobinemia (methemoglobin >50%) patients have dysrhythmias, seizures, coma and death. Healthy people may not have many symptoms with methemoglobin levels < 15%, however patients with co-morbidities such as anemia, cardiovascular disease, lung disease, sepsis, or presence of other abnormal hemoglobin species (e.g. carboxyhemoglobin, sulfehemoglobin or sickle hemoglobin) may experience moderate to severe symptoms at much lower levels (as low as 5-8%).

Carriers

The Fugates, a family that lived in the hills of Kentucky, are the most famous example of this hereditary chromosomal error. Known as the Blue Fugates, Martin Fugate, settled near Hazard, Kentucky, circa 1800. His wife was a carrier of the recessive methemoglobinemia (met-H) gene, as was a nearby clan with whom the Fugates intermarried. As a result, many descendants of the Fugates were born with met-H.[5]

The 'blue men of Lurgan' were a pair of Lurgan men suffering from what was described as 'familial idiopathic methaemoglobinaemia' who were treated by Dr. James Deeny in 1942. Deeny, who would later become the Chief Medical Officer of the Republic of Ireland, prescribed a course of ascorbic acid and sodium bicarbonate. In case one, by the eighth day of treatment there was a marked change in appearance and by the twelfth day of treatment the patient's complexion was normal. In case two, the patient's complexion reached normality over a month-long duration of treatment.[6]

References

  1. ^ Ash-Bernal R, Wise R, Wright SM (2004). "Acquired methemoglobinemia: a retrospective series of 138 cases at 2 teaching hospitals". Medicine (Baltimore) 83 (5): 265–73. PMID 15342970.
  2. ^ Zosel A, Rychter K, Leikin JB (2007). "Dapsone-induced methemoglobinemia: case report and literature review". Am J Ther 14 (6): 585–7. doi:10.1097/MJT.0b013e3180a6af55. PMID 18090884.
  3. ^ Adams V, Marley J, McCarroll C (2007). "Prilocaine induced methaemoglobinaemia in a medically compromised patient. Was this an inevitable consequence of the dose administered?". Br Dent J 203 (10): 585–7. doi:10.1038/bdj.2007.1045. PMID 18037845.
  4. ^ Yusim Y, Livingstone D, Sidi A (2007). "Blue dyes, blue people: the systemic effects of blue dyes when administered via different routes". J Clin Anesth 19 (4): 315–21. doi:10.1016/j.jclinane.2007.01.006. PMID 17572332.
  5. ^ Straight Dope article on the Fugates of Appalachia, an extended family of blue-skinned people
  6. ^ Reference to these cases is found in the British Medical Journal, June 12, Vol. 1 ,pg. 721, written by J. Deeny, E.T. Murdock and J.J. Rogan and appears also in the book by James Deeny:
    * Deeny, James. The End of an Epidemic. Dublin: A.& A.Farmar. ISBN 1-899047-06-9. 
  • Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine. Braunwald, Fauci, et al. 15th Edition, McGraw Hill, 2001, pp671;2612.
 
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Methemoglobinemia". A list of authors is available in Wikipedia.
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