Sulfohemoglobinemia secundaria a zopiclona: casos clínicos
Author
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Benavente Aránguiz, Rafael Ignacio
Author
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Parada, Natalia
Author
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Sánchez, Bárbara
Author
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Meneses, Rodrigo
Author
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Torres, Sebastián
Author
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Pineda, Camila
Author
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Aguirre, Herman
Author
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Peña, Camila
Admission date
dc.date.accessioned
2024-08-19T19:13:11Z
Available date
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2024-08-19T19:13:11Z
Publication date
dc.date.issued
2022
Cita de ítem
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Rev Med Chile 2022; 150: 1401-1406
es_ES
Identifier
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0034-9887
Identifier
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https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/200302
Abstract
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Sulfhemoglobin (SulfHb) is formed by hemoglobin (Hb) oxidation by sulfur
compounds. Sulfhemoglobinemia is mainly associated with drugs or intestinal
bacterial overgrowth. Patients present with central cyanosis, an abnormal pulse
oximetry and normal arterial oxygen partial pressure. These features are shared
with methemoglobinemia (MetHb) whose diagnosis requires an arterial co-oximetry.
Depending on the device used, SulfHb may produce interference with
this technique. We report two females aged 31 and 43 years, consulting at the
emergency room with cyanosis. Both had a history of acute and chronic, high
dose zopiclone ingestion. Pulse oximetry showed desaturation but with normal
arterial oxygen partial pressure. Cardiac and pulmonary diseases were ruled out.
Co-oximetry in two different analyzers showed interference or normal MetHb
percentages. No other complications ensued, and cyanosis decreased over days.
Since MetHb was discarded among other causes of cyanosis in a compatible clinical
context, the diagnosis of sulfhemoglobinemia was made. The confirmatory
method is not available in Chile. The presence of SulfHb is difficult to diagnose,
confirmatory tests are not readily available, and it frequently interferes with
arterial co-oximetry. This is attributed to a similar absorbance peak of both
pigments in arterial blood. Venous co-oximetry can be useful in this context.
SulfHb is a self-limited condition in most cases, however it must be differentiated
from methemoglobinemia to avoid inappropriate treatments like methylene blue.
es_ES
Lenguage
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es
es_ES
Publisher
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Sociedad Médica de Santiago
es_ES
Type of license
dc.rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United States