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제초제 중독으로 유발된 메트헤모글로빈혈증 환자에서 메틸렌블루 사용 후 발생한 용혈성 빈혈 1례
A Patient with Methemoglobinemia after Herbicide Intoxication has Hemolytic Anemia Induced by Methylene Blue
김선표 ( Sun Pyo Kim ) , 김동환 ( Dong Hwan Kim ) , 선경훈 ( Kyung Hoon Sun ) , 윤대흥 ( Dae Heung Yoon ) , 김성중 ( Seong Jung Kim ) , 조수형 ( Soo Hyeong Cho ) , 조남수 ( Nam Soo Cho )
UCI I410-ECN-0102-2016-510-000272128
이 자료는 4페이지 이하의 자료입니다.

Methylene blue is the first choice for treating methemoglobinemia, any increase in normal methemoglobin levels. Methemoglobin is an abnormal hemoglobin in which the iron has been oxidized to the ferric(+3) state, making it incapable of oxygen transport. Methemoglobinemia most commonly results from exposure to oxidizing chemicals, but may also arise form genetic, dietary, or even idiopathic etiologies. Patients with low methemoglobin levels are asymptomatic, but high methemoglobin levels can lead to headaches or even death. Methylene blue, the first-line treatment for methemoglobinemia, can also produce hemolytic anemia. Jaundice or dark urine during methylene blue treatment may indicate hemolytic anemia. A 47-year-old female patient with a history of depressive mood disorder developed significant methemoglobinemia after ingesting a Propanil overdose. Twenty-two hours after ingestion, methemoglobin levels in the blood were 73.2%. She was treated with intravenous methylene blue in the therapeutic range (1 mg/kg every 4 h for 3days). The 2nd day after methylene blue use, methemoglobin levels in the blood were 33%, and the 5th day decreased to 10% with better general condition. The patient had hyperbilirubinemia after hemolytic anemia, but she recovered completely.

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