Amiodarone and Phlebitis – Can Filters Help?
Pall Medical, part of Cytiva
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Amiodarone Filtration: Explore the Problem and Learn the Solution
Amiodarone is a well-known drug against heart arrhythmia, which is linked to high rates of phlebitis1, a painful inflammation of the veins.?So why does amiodarone?need a?filter? Could they reduce the concentration of the drug reaching the patient or impair the flush kinetics?
What’s the problem?
Amiodarone has been the first-line treatment for certain forms of heart arrhythmia since it was first used in 1961. However, intravenous (IV) administration of the drug frequently leads to phlebitis, defined as an inflammation of the vein wall characterized by pain, edema, erythema, streak formation, and/or a palpable cord.2
Amiodarone filter purpose
A recent systematic review of articles published before 2016 showed that phlebitis incidence was lower with bolus administration of amiodarone than with longer infusions (P=0.002). Additionally,?the use of in-line filters and nursing guidelines?for amiodarone administration significantly reduced phlebitis rates (P<0.001), with one study also showing a reduction in phlebitis severity.3
What about drug concentration and flush kinetics??
?So, filters have been shown to help, but how is the drug affected by the presence of the filter?
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?
Based on our data with Pall AEF1 and ELD96 families of filters at low concentrations of amiodarone the answer to both questions is a clear “no”4.?
References
Author:
Dr. Volker Luibl, MBA
Dr. Luibl is Pall accomplished Demand Generation Marketing Manager with extensive expertise in medical device and clinical science.
Sales Associate at American Airlines
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