Posts Tagged ‘Education’

Methemoglobinemia

Sunday, March 8th, 2009

(Double click on any word for definition)

Hemoglobin contains 4 heme groups and each heme group contains Fe2+

When Fe2+ gets oxidized to Fe3+ it is called MetHb

MetHb not only reduces the oxygen binding capacity of Hb but interferes with oxygen unloading to the tissues thereby shifting the oxygen dissociation curve to the left

Under physiologic conditions MetHb is continuously produced due to the oxidizing effect of oxygen but is reduced back to Hb by cytochrome b5 reductase (NADPH MetHb reductase)

Normal levels of MetHb in humans < 2%

5 g/dl of deoxyHb produces cyanosis

MetHb produces cyanosis at 1.5 g/dl

Most commonly caused by drugs:

Benzocaine

Dapsone

Primaquine

Lidocaine

Nitrates

Sulfonamides

Prilocaine

Nitroprusside

Phenazopyridine

Pulse oximetry & Co-oximetry

Regular pulse oximeter measures UV absorption only 2 wavelengths for oxyHb (940nm) and deoxyHb (660)

Co-oximeter measures light absorption of blood at multiple UV wavelengths

They can measure the percentages of oxyHb, deoxyHb, carboxyHb and MetHb

Require a blood sample – cannot be used for continuous monitoring

Pulse oximeter is unreliable for measuring MetHb because methemoglobin is detected by both the oxyHb (940 nm) and deoxyHb (660 nm) sensors of the oximeters

At low levels (20%), methemoglobin is detected primarily by the deoxyHb sensor,and a pulse oximeter may show a falsely low oxygen saturation

At high methemoglobin levels (70%), detection by the oxyhemoglobin sensor pre- dominates, and a pulse oximeter may show a falsely high reading

Methylene blue, the antidote for MetHb, is also detected by the pulse oximeter’s deoxyHb sensor, which leads to the potential for falsely low post-treatment oxygen saturation readings

Clinical findings

Cyanosis unresponsive to oxygen

Cyanosis in the presence of normal (calculated) oxygen saturation

Saturation gap = Calculated sat – pulse oxymetry

Suspect presence of abnormal Hb if the saturation gap > 5% (+ or -)

Saturation gap is not proportional to MetHb level

Treatment

Symptomatic and those with MetHb > 20% should receive methylene blue

Methylene blue acts as a cofactor for NADPH MetHb reductase thereby converting Fe3+ to Fe2+ in Hb

Methylene blue is not effective in patients with G6PD deficiency as they have very low levels of NADPH – will cause hemolysis

Side effects of methylene blue includes bluish skin which may complicate assessment of cyanosis

Methylene blue also causes MetHb (in higher doses) !!!!!

If not responding to methylene blue – ? sulfHb, ongoing toxicity esp if toxin is ingested or G6PD deficiency – you may also have to consider an alternative diagnosis !!!

Rarely hyperbaric oxygen and/or exchange transfusion may be done

Genetics – A guide to understanding the literature

Wednesday, March 4th, 2009

This presentation explains some of the basic concepts of genetics and provides a framework to analyze and understand medical literature pertaining to genetic studies.

(Disclaimer: I am not a geneticist and this is my attempt as a physician, to understand the role of genetics in patient care. If there are any inaccuracies, I will appreciate if you will leave a comment. Thanks)

Alcohol and Blood

Monday, February 23rd, 2009

Too often, people only hear about the bad effects of alcohol on the liver (and the good affects on the heart) but most body systems are actually affected in an adverse manner.

This is a brief presentation of the effects of alcohol on the hematopoietic system (blood and bone marrow).

Amazing response if you quit smoking now

Thursday, November 20th, 2008

smoking_timeline_2070x1530.gif

(Click Image to enlarge)

Amazing response by the human body to return to normal if you quit smoking right now. On the other hand, this also shows how much harm cigarettes do to you.

Reference: HealthBolt, KevinMD

Interesting photos from Life Photo Archive:

cigarette.jpeg cigarette1.jpeg cigarette3.jpeg

cigarette4.jpeg cigarette5.jpeg

Eradicating Polio – The Final Inch

Wednesday, November 19th, 2008

Poliomyelitis is a deadly disease which may affect the central nervous system leading to irreversible flaccid paralysis of the legs. Since it strikes children at a very young age, affected children are paralyzed for their entire life.

Google’s philanthropic arm – Google.org is about to release a movie titled “The Final Inch” to document the historic effort to eradicate this disease from the planet. Once we succeed this will be second disease after small pox to be found only in history books (and/or some covert lab, somewhere in the world).

The Final Inch is a 38-minute film about the historic global effort to eradicate polio. Here, the story told is as much about the messengers as the message. You’ll meet Munzareen Fatima, one of the thousands of community “foot soldiers” across India working to sway reluctant families to vaccinate their children, and Dr. Ashfaq Bhat, who travels into the backwaters of India’s Ganges Basin by boat and foot to detect emerging cases of polio. Martha Mason and Mikail Davenport bring us into their lives and describe the paralyzing challenges of childhood polio, reminding us how endemic polio once was in the United States.

Filmed in high-definition (HD) in cinematic style — wide open shots to give a strong sense of place — The Final Inch captures their stories, and we hope it is both a tribute and an inspiration of hope. With a final push, this is a disease that can, and should, be eradicated finally.

Via Google.org

The movie airs on HBO in 2009. Check out the film trailer: