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Why can you never find an aspirin in the jungle? . Because those parrots eat
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1. Paracetamol: Friend or Foe Annie Moulden (Paediatrician)
Mike South (Paediatrician)
Soula Zambetis (Senior Clinical Pharmacist)
Royal Childrens Hospital, Melbourne
2. Why can you never find an aspirin in the jungle?
3. Paracetamol: Friend or Foe This Clinical Practice Review meeting was triggered by the recent report of a death of a child in NSW from paracetamol toxicity when the drug was given with therapeutic intent.
A summary of the NSW Coroner findings can be read at
www.rch.org.au/genmed/media/NSW-Coroner-on-paracetamol.pps
4. Paracetamol quotes Ive been giving her Panadol but it isnt working - I cant get her temperature down
Could you write him up for a routine paracetemol order just in case
5. Paracetamol - history
6. RCH Usage Most commonly prescribed drug
Monthly figures
630 x 100 mL (240 mg/5 mL) bottles 63 Litres / Month
230 x 24 pk, 500 mg tabs 5520 tabs / Month
7. Paracetamol toxicity in therapeutic use Usually high therapeutic / supra-therapeutic doses
Often over several days
Often post-surgery
Usually Co-morbidity
Increasing number of reports in literature
9. Paracetamol - actions analgesic
antipyretic
10. Paracetamol - analgesic
11. Paracetamol - antipyretic
12. Paracetamol - antipyretic
13. Initiation of Fever
14. Benefits of Fever Immunologic - these work better at higher temp
helper T-lymphocyte proliferation
enhanced T-lymphocyte cell killing
enhanced interferon production and function
Antimicrobial - these die at higher temp
rhinovirus
polio virus
pneumococcus
gonococcus
syphilis treponeme
15. Benefits of Fever - experimental Antipyretic treatment increased mortality from Aeromonas infection in desert iguanas.
Untreated newborn mice infected with coxsackie virus had considerably lower mortality than those in which fever was suppressed.
Adult volunteers experimentally infected with rhinovirus excreted the virus longer if treated with antipyretics.
Children with chickenpox had a longer time to total crusting of lesions in paracetamol compared to placebo-treated subjects.
16. Negative aspects of Fever Heat stroke - v. v. rare in children with fever of acute illness
Febrile convulsions -2-5% of children
? Comfort / activity / appetite / mood
17. So would antipyretics help? Heat stroke - v. v. rare in children with fever of acute illness
Febrile convulsions -2-5% of children
? Comfort / activity / appetite / mood
18. Paracetamol - antipyretic
19. Paracetamol- How to avoid accidental poisoning with therapeutic intent Only use it when indicated
Recognise potential benefits of fever, lack of harm and limited value of antipyresis.
Treat pain and discomfort - not feverTreat the child and not the thermometer
Educate parents. Avoid Fever Phobia
Avoid routine PRN orders of paracetamol
Take care in dosing & duration
20. Avoid routine PRN orders
21. Avoid routine PRN orders
22. How to avoid accidental poisoning with therapeutic intent Usual dose 60mg/kg/day
Max dose 90mg/kg/day (or 4g / day if > 45kg)
Not for more than 2 days, especially if <2years
Beware continued use at high doses
Beware other drugs (esp alcohol, anticonvulsants)
Beware use the sick child
Beware poor renal or hepatic function
Beware obesity (overdosing by weight, and associated liver dysfunction)
Stop if child vomiting, drowsy, jaundiced
23. Beware dose confusion RCH Paediatric Pharmacopoeia
15 mg/kg/dose 4-6 hrly.
In an unsupervised, community setting, limit dosage to 60 mg/kg/24 hrs for up to 48 hrs.
Up to 90 mg/kg/24 hrs can be used under medical supervision. Review after 48 hrs.
Stat doses of 30 mg/kg may be used for night-time dosing
RECTAL: 20-40 mg/kg as a once-off dose, rounded to appropriate suppository strength
Peri-op analgesia - higher doses often used (sometimes up to 60mg/kg/dose)
24. Confused yet?
25. Paracetamol: Friend or Foe
Soula Zambetis (Senior Clinical Pharmacist)
Royal Childrens Hospital, Melbourne
26. Practical Issues Transfers from...
ward
emergency
theatre
High rectal doses
care when changing to oral
NEW ORDER MUST BE WRITTEN
New Drug chart
use review date box
27. Practical Issues Discharge prescriptions
pharmacy department do not supply paracetamol or OTC items upon discharge
problems arise when parents are told to give e.g. 5ml of paracetamol
120 mg/5 mL
240 mg/5 mL
100 mg/mL ( = 500 mg/5 mL)
28. Paracetamol Awareness Poster
Paracetamol and your child
MIRC
poster
Paracetamol Dosage (for RCH inpatients)
Keeping Tabs
? Future
paracetamol discharge information sheet