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acetylcysteine |
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acetylcysteine /ac·e·tyl·cys·te·ine/ (as″ĕ-til-) (as″ĕ-tēl-sis´te-ēn) a derivative of cysteine used as a mucolytic in various bronchopulmonary disorders and as an antidote to acetaminophen poisoning.
acetylcysteine [-sis′tēn] a mucolytic and acetaminophen antidote. indications It is prescribed in the treatment of chronic pulmonary disease, acute bronchopulmonary disease, atelectasis resulting from mucous obstruction, and acetaminophen poisoning. contraindication Known sensitivity to this drug prohibits its use. adverse effects Among the most serious adverse reactions are stomatitis, nausea, rhinorrhea, and bronchospasm. acetylcysteine [as″ĕ-til-sis´te-ēn] a mucolytic agent used by instillation or nebulization to reduce the viscosity of respiratory tract secretions and orally or intravenously as an antidote to acetaminophen poisoning.
acetylcysteine ( n brand name: Mucosil;
drug class: mucolytic; action: decreases viscosity of pulmonary secretions by breaking disulfide links of mucoproteins; uses: acetaminophen toxicity, bronchitis, pneumonia, cystic fibrosis, emphysema, atelectasis tuberculosis, and complications of thoracic surgery. acetylcysteine (N-acetylcysteine) Acetadote, Mucomyst (CA), Mucomyst 10, Mucosil-10, Mucosil-20, Parovelex (UK) (CA) Pharmacologic class: N-acetyl derivative of naturally occurring amino acid (L-cysteine) Therapeutic class: Mucolytic, acetaminophen antidote Pregnancy risk category B ActionDecreases viscosity of secretions, promoting secretion removal through coughing, postural drainage, and mechanical means. In acetaminophen overdose, maintains and restores hepatic glutathione, needed to inactivate toxic metabolites. AvailabilityInjection: 200 mg/ml Solution: 10%, 20% ⊘Indications and dosages ➣ Mucolytic agent in adjunctive treatment of acute and chronic bronchopulmonary disease (bronchitis, bronchiectasis, chronic asthmatic bronchitis, emphysema, pneumonia, primary amyloidism of lungs, tuberculosis, tracheobronchitis), pulmonary complications of cystic fibrosis, atelectasis, or pulmonary complications related to surgery, posttraumatic chest conditions, tracheostomy care, or use during anesthesia Adults and children: Nebulization (face mask, mouthpiece, tracheostomy) - 6 to 10 ml of 10% solution or 3 to 5 ml of 20% solution three or four times daily. Dosage range is 2 to 20 ml of 10% solution or 1 to 10 ml of 20% solution q 2 to 6 hours. Nebulization (tent or croupette) - Volume of 10% or 20% solution that will maintain heavy mist for desired period Instillation (direct) - 1 to 2 ml of 10% to 20% solution q 1 hour p.r.n. Instillation via syringe attached to percutaneous intratracheal catheter - 2 to 4 ml of 10% solution or 1 to 2 ml of 20% solution q 1 to 4 hours ➣ Diagnostic bronchial studies Adults and children: Two to three doses of 2 to 4 ml of 10% solution or 1 to 2 ml of 20% solution by nebulization or intratracheal instillation before procedure ➣ Acetaminophen overdose Adults, elderly patients, children: Give immediately if 24 hours or less have elapsed since acetaminophen ingestion. Use the following protocol: Empty stomach by lavage or emesis induction, and then have patient drink copious amounts of water. If activated charcoal has been given, perform lavage before giving acetylcysteine. Draw blood for acetaminophen plasma assay and baseline aspartate aminotransferase (AST), alanine aminotransferase (ALT), prothrombin time, bilirubin, blood glucose, blood urea nitrogen, electrolyte, and creatinine clearance levels. If ingested acetaminophen dose is in toxic range, give acetylcysteine 140 mg/kg P.O. as loading dose from 20% solution. Administer 17 maintenance doses of 70 mg/kg P.O. q 4 hours, starting 4 hours after loading dose. Repeat procedure until acetaminophen blood level is safe. If patient vomits loading dose or any maintenance dose within 1 hour of administration, repeat that dose. Off-label uses• Unstable angina Contraindications• Hypersensitivity to drug (except with antidotal use) PrecautionsUse cautiously in: Administration• Separate administration times of this drug and antibiotics.
Adverse reactionsCNS: dizziness, drowsiness, headache CV: hypotension, hypertension, tachycardia EENT: severe rhinorrhea GI: nausea, vomiting, stomatitis, constipation, anorexia Hepatic: hepatotoxicity Respiratory: hemoptysis, tracheal and bronchial irritation, increased secretions, wheezing, chest tightness, bronchospasm Skin: urticaria, rash, clamminess, angioedema Other: tooth damage, chills, fever, hypersensitivity including anaphylaxis InteractionsDrug-drug. Activated charcoal: increased absorption and decreased efficacy of acetylcysteine Nitroglycerin: increased nitroglycerin effects, causing hypotension and headache Drug-diagnostic tests. Liver function tests: abnormal results Patient monitoring• Monitor respirations, cough, and character of secretions. Patient teaching• Instruct patient to report worsening cough and other respiratory symptoms. acetylcysteine Mucomyst Therapeutics A mucolytic used to ↓ the viscosity of lung secretions, and is thought to improve O2 delivery and consumption by replenishing glutathione stores; acetylcysteine is also used per os or IV as
an antidote, and minimizes hepatocellular necrosis in Pts with fulminant liver failure; it has also been used for treating dry eye–keratoconjunctivitis sicca, and as an enema for managing bowel obstruction caused by meconium ileus. See Cystic
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