Acetylcysteine Solution
Name: Acetylcysteine Solution
- Acetylcysteine Solution drug
- Acetylcysteine Solution drugs like
- Acetylcysteine Solution side effects
- Acetylcysteine Solution effects of acetylcysteine solution
- Acetylcysteine Solution uses
- Acetylcysteine Solution adverse effects
- Acetylcysteine Solution 100 mg
- Acetylcysteine Solution injection
- Acetylcysteine Solution mg
- Acetylcysteine Solution action
- Acetylcysteine Solution drug action
What do I need to tell my doctor BEFORE I take Acetylcysteine Solution?
- If you have an allergy to acetylcysteine or any other part of acetylcysteine solution.
- If you are allergic to any drugs like this one, any other drugs, foods, or other substances. Tell your doctor about the allergy and what signs you had, like rash; hives; itching; shortness of breath; wheezing; cough; swelling of face, lips, tongue, or throat; or any other signs.
This medicine may interact with other drugs or health problems.
Tell your doctor and pharmacist about all of your drugs (prescription or OTC, natural products, vitamins) and health problems. You must check to make sure that it is safe for you to take this medicine with all of your drugs and health problems. Do not start, stop, or change the dose of any drug without checking with your doctor.
What are some other side effects of Acetylcysteine Solution?
All drugs may cause side effects. However, many people have no side effects or only have minor side effects. Call your doctor or get medical help if any of these side effects or any other side effects bother you or do not go away:
For all uses of acetylcysteine solution:
- Upset stomach or throwing up.
Liquid for breathing in:
- Runny nose.
- Feeling sleepy.
- Mouth irritation or mouth sores.
- Clammy skin.
- Fever.
These are not all of the side effects that may occur. If you have questions about side effects, call your doctor. Call your doctor for medical advice about side effects.
You may report side effects to the FDA at 1-800-FDA-1088. You may also report side effects at http://www.fda.gov/medwatch.
If OVERDOSE is suspected
If you think there has been an overdose, call your poison control center or get medical care right away. Be ready to tell or show what was taken, how much, and when it happened.
How do I store and/or throw out Acetylcysteine Solution?
- Store unopened vials at room temperature.
- Store opened vials in a refrigerator. Throw away any part not used after 4 days.
- Protect from light.
- Keep all drugs in a safe place. Keep all drugs out of the reach of children and pets.
- Check with your pharmacist about how to throw out unused drugs.
Consumer Information Use and Disclaimer
- If your symptoms or health problems do not get better or if they become worse, call your doctor.
- Do not share your drugs with others and do not take anyone else's drugs.
- Keep a list of all your drugs (prescription, natural products, vitamins, OTC) with you. Give this list to your doctor.
- Talk with the doctor before starting any new drug, including prescription or OTC, natural products, or vitamins.
- Some drugs may have another patient information leaflet. Check with your pharmacist. If you have any questions about acetylcysteine solution, please talk with your doctor, nurse, pharmacist, or other health care provider.
- If you think there has been an overdose, call your poison control center or get medical care right away. Be ready to tell or show what was taken, how much, and when it happened.
This information should not be used to decide whether or not to take this medicine or any other medicine. Only the healthcare provider has the knowledge and training to decide which medicines are right for a specific patient. This information does not endorse any medicine as safe, effective, or approved for treating any patient or health condition. This is only a brief summary of general information about acetylcysteine solution. It does NOT include all information about the possible uses, directions, warnings, precautions, interactions, adverse effects, or risks that may apply to this medicine. This information is not specific medical advice and does not replace information you receive from the healthcare provider. You must talk with the healthcare provider for complete information about the risks and benefits of using acetylcysteine solution.
Review Date: October 4, 2017
Description
Acetylcysteine Solution is for inhalation (mucolytic agent) or oral administration (acetaminophen antidote), and available as sterile, unpreserved solutions (not for injection).
Acetylcysteine is the N-acetyl derivative of the naturally occurring amino acid, L-cysteine. Chemically, it is N-acetyl-L-cysteine.
The compound is a white crystalline powder which melts at 104°−110°C and has a very slight odor. The structural formula for acetylcysteine is as follows:
Molecular weight: 163.19
Each mL of the 10% solution contains acetylcysteine 100 mg; edetate disodium, dihydrate 0.25 mg.
Each mL of the 20% solution contains acetylcysteine 200 mg; edetate disodium, dihydrate 0.5 mg.
The solutions also contain sodium hydroxide and may contain hydrochloric acid for pH adjustment, pH 7.0 (6.0 to 7.5). Acetylcysteine Solution, USP is oxygen sensitive.
Acetylcysteine As A Mucolytic Agent |
Indications and usage
Acetylcysteine is indicated as adjuvant therapy for patients with abnormal, viscid, or inspissated mucous secretions in such conditions as:
Chronic bronchopulmonary disease
(chronic emphysema, emphysema with bronchitis, chronic asthmatic bronchitis, tuberculosis, bronchiectasis and primary amyloidosis of the lung)
Acute bronchopulmonary disease
(pneumonia, bronchitis, tracheobronchitis)
Pulmonary complications of cystic fibrosis
Tracheostomy care
Pulmonary complications associated with surgery
Use during anesthesia
Post-traumatic chest conditions
Atelectasis due to mucous obstruction
Diagnostic bronchial studies (bronchograms, bronchospirometry, and bronchial wedge catheterization)
Dosage and administration
General
Acetylcysteine Solution 10% and 20% is available in glass vials containing 30 mL. The 20% solution may be diluted to a lesser concentration with either Sodium Chloride Inhalation Solution; Sodium Chloride Injection; or Sterile Water for Injection, or Sterile Water for Inhalation. The 10% solution may be used undiluted.
Storage of Opened Vials
This product does not contain an antimicrobial agent, and care must be taken to minimize contamination of the sterile solution. If only a portion of the solution in a vial is used, store the remainder in a refrigerator and use for inhalation only within 96 hours.
Nebulization Face Mask, Mouth Piece, Tracheostomy
When nebulized into a face mask, mouth piece or tracheostomy, 1 to 10 mL of the 20% solution or 2 to 20 mL of the 10% solution may be given every 2 to 6 hours; the recommended dose for most patients is 3 to 5 mL of the 20% solution or 6 to 10 mL of the 10% solution 3 to 4 times a day.
Nebulization Tent, Croupette
In special circumstances it may be necessary to nebulize into a tent or Croupette, and this method of use must be individualized to take into account the available equipment and the patient’s particular needs. This form of administration requires very large volumes of the solution, occasionally as much as 300 mL during a single treatment period.
If a tent or Croupette must be used, the recommended dose is the volume of acetylcysteine (using 10% or 20%) that will maintain a very heavy mist in the tent or Croupette for the desired period. Administration for intermittent or continuous prolonged periods, including overnight, may be desirable.
Direct Instillation
When used by direct instillation, 1 to 2 mL of a 10% or 20% solution may be given as often as every hour.
When used for the routine nursing care of patients with tracheostomy, 1 to 2 mL of a 10% to 20% solution may be given every 1 to 4 hours by instillation into the tracheostomy.
Acetylcysteine may be introduced directly into a particular segment of the bronchopulmonary tree by inserting (under local anesthesia and direct vision) a small plastic catheter into the trachea. Two to 5 mL of the 20% solution may then be instilled by means of a syringe connected to the catheter.
Acetylcysteine may also be given through a percutaneous intratracheal catheter. One to 2 mL of the 20% or 2 to 4 mL of the 10% solution every 1 to 4 hours may then be given by a syringe attached to the catheter.
Diagnostic Bronchograms
For diagnostic bronchial studies, 2 or 3 administrations of 1 to 2 mL of the 20% solution or 2 to 4 mL of the 10% solution should be given by nebulization or by instillation intratracheally, prior to the procedure.
Administration of Aerosol
Materials
Acetylcysteine may be administered using conventional nebulizers made of plastic or glass. Certain materials used in nebulization equipment react with acetylcysteine. The most reactive of these are certain metals (notably iron and copper) and rubber. Where material may come into contact with Acetylcysteine Solution, parts made of the following acceptable materials should be used: glass, plastic, aluminum, anodized aluminum, chromed metal, tantalum, sterling silver, or stainless steel. Silver may become tarnished after exposure, but this is not harmful to the drug action or to the patient.
Nebulizing Gases
Compressed tank gas (air) or an air compressor should be used to provide pressure for nebulizing the solution. Oxygen may also be used but should be used with usual precautions in patients with severe respiratory disease and CO2 retention.
Apparatus
Acetylcysteine is usually administered as fine nebulae, and the nebulizer used should be capable of providing optimal quantities of a suitable range of particle sizes.
Commercially available nebulizers will produce nebulae of acetylcysteine satisfactory for retention in the respiratory tract. Most of the nebulizers tested will supply a high proportion of the drug solution as particles of less than 10 microns in diameter. Mitchell2 has shown that particles less than 10 microns should be retained in the respiratory tract satisfactorily.
Various intermittent positive pressure breathing devices nebulized acetylcysteine with a satisfactory efficiency including: No: 40 De Vilbiss (The De Vilbiss Co., Somerset, Pennsylvania) and the Bennett Twin-Jet Nebulizer (Puritan Bennett Corp., Oak at 13th, Kansas City, Missouri).
The nebulized solution may be inhaled directly from the nebulizer. Nebulizers may also be attached to plastic face masks or plastic mouthpieces. Suitable nebulizers may also be fitted for use with the various intermittent positive pressure breathing (IPPB) machines. The nebulizing equipment should be cleaned immediately after use because the residues may clog the smaller orifices or corrode metal parts.
Hand bulbs are not recommended for routine use for nebulizing acetylcysteine because their output is generally too small. Also, some hand-operated nebulizers deliver particles that are larger than optimum for inhalation therapy.
Acetylcysteine should not be placed directly into the chamber of a heated (hot pot) nebulizer. A heated nebulizer may be part of the nebulization assembly to provide a warm saturated atmosphere if the acetylcysteine aerosol is introduced by means of a separate unheated nebulizer. Usual precautions for administration of warm saturated nebulae should be observed.
The nebulized solution may be breathed directly from the nebulizer. Nebulizers may also be attached to plastic face masks, plastic face tents, plastic mouth pieces, conventional plastic oxygen tents, or head tents. Suitable nebulizers may also be fitted for use with the various intermittent positive pressure breathing (IPPB) machines.
The nebulizing equipment should be cleaned immediately after use, otherwise the residues may occlude the fine orifices or corrode metal parts.
Prolonged Nebulization
When three-fourths of the initial volume of Acetylcysteine Solution has been nebulized, a quantity of Sterile Water for Injection (approximately equal to the volume of solution remaining), should be added to the nebulizer. This obviates any concentration of the agent in the residual solvent remaining after prolonged nebulization.
Compatibility
The physical and chemical compatibility of acetylcysteine with certain other drugs that might be concomitantly administered by nebulization, direct instillation, or topical application, has been studied.
Acetylcysteine should not be mixed with certain antibiotics. For example, the antibiotics tetracycline hydrochloride, oxytetracycline hydrochloride, and erythromycin lactobionate were found to be incompatible when mixed in the same solution. These agents may be administered from separate solutions if administration of these agents is desirable.
The supplying of these data should not be interpreted as a recommendation for combining acetylcysteine with other drugs. The table is not presented as positive assurance that no incompatibility will be present, since these data are based only on short-term compatibility studies done in the Mead Johnson Research Center. Manufacturers may change their formulations, and this could alter compatibilities. These data are intended to serve only as a guide for predicting compounding problems.
If it is deemed advisable to prepare an admixture, it should be administered as soon as possible after preparation. Do not store unused mixtures.
1. The rating, Incompatible, is based on the formation of a precipitate, a change in clarity, immiscibility or a rapid loss of potency of acetylcysteine or the active ingredient of the PRODUCT AND/OR AGENT in the admixture. The rating, Compatible, means that there was no significant physical change in the admixture when compared with a control solution of the PRODUCT AND/OR AGENT, and that there was no predicted chemical incompatibility. All of the admixtures have been tested for short-term chemical compatibility by assaying for the concentration of acetylcysteine after mixing. 2. The active ingredient in the PRODUCT AND/OR AGENT was also assayed after mixing. Some of the admixtures developed minor physical changes which were considered to be insufficient to rate the admixtures incompatible. These are listed in footnotes 3, 4, and 5. 3. A strong odor developed after storage for 24 hours at room temperature. 4. The admixture was a slightly darker shade of yellow than a control solution of the PRODUCT AND/OR AGENT. 5. A light tan color developed after storage for 24 hours at room temperature. 6. Entries are final concentrations. Values in parentheses relate volumes of Acetylcysteine Solutions to volume of test solutions. | ||||
IN VITRO COMPATIBILITY1 TESTS OF ACETYLCYSTEINE | ||||
RATIO TESTED6 | ||||
PRODUCT AND/OR AGENT | COMPATIBILITY RATING | ACETYL- CYSTEINE | PRODUCT OR AGENT | |
ANESTHETIC, GAS | ||||
Halothane | Compatible | 20% | Infinite | |
Nitrous Oxide | Compatible | 20% | Infinite | |
ANESTHETIC, LOCAL | ||||
Cocaine HCl | Compatible | 10% | 5% | |
Lidocaine HCl | Compatible | 10% | 2% | |
Tetracaine HCl | Compatible | 10% | 1% | |
ANTIBACTERIALS (A parenteral form of each antibiotic was used) | ||||
Bacitracin2.3 (mix and use at once) | Compatible | 10% | 5,000 U/mL | |
Chloramonenicol Sodium Succinate | Compatible | 20% | 20 mg/mL | |
Carbenicillin Disodium2 (mix and use at once) | Compatible |
10% |
125 mg/mL | |
Gentamicin Sulfate2 | Compatible | 10% | 20 mg/mL | |
Kanamycin Sulfate2 (mix and use at once) |
Compatible |
10% |
167 mg/mL | |
Compatible | 17% | 85 mg/mL | ||
Lincomycin HCl2 | Compatible | 10% | 150 mg/mL | |
Neomycin Sulfate2 | Compatible | 10% | 100 mg/mL | |
Novobiocin Sodium2 | Compatible | 10% | 25 mg/mL | |
Penicillin G Potassium2 (mix and use at once) | Compatible Compatible | 10% 10% | 25,000 U/mL 100,000 U/mL | |
Polymyxin B Sulfate2 | Compatible | 10% | 50,000 U/mL | |
Cephalothin Sodium | Compatible | 10% | 110 mg/mL | |
Colistimethate Sodium2 (mix and use at once) |
Compatible |
10% |
37.5 mg/mL | |
Vancomycin HCl2 | Compatible | 10% | 25 mg/mL | |
Amphotercin B | Incompatible | 4%-15% | 1-4 mg/mL | |
Chlortetracycline HCl2 | Incompatible | 10% | 12.5 mg/mL | |
Erythromycin Lactobionate | Incompatible | 10% | 15 mg/mL | |
Oxytetracycline HCl | Incompatible | 10% | 12.5 mL | |
Ampicillin Sodium | Incompatible | 10% | 50 mg/mL | |
Tetracycline HCl | Incompatible | 10% | 12.5 mg/mL | |
BRONCHODILATORS | ||||
Isoproterenol HCl2 | Compatible | 3% | 0.5% | |
Isoproterenol HCl2 | Compatible | 10% | 0.05% | |
Isoproterenol HCl2 | Compatible | 20% | 0.05% | |
Isoproterenol HCl | Compatible | 13.3% (2 parts) | .33% (1 part) | |
Isoetharine HCl | Compatible | 13.3% (2 parts) | (1 part) | |
Epinephrine HCl | Compatible | 13.3% (2 parts) | .33% (1 part) | |
CONTRAST MEDIA | ||||
Iodized Oil | Incompatible | 20%/20 mL | 40%/10 mL | |
DECONGESTANTS | ||||
Phenylephrine HCl2 | Compatible | 3% | .25% | |
Phenylephrine HCl | Compatible | 13.3% (2 parts) | .17% (1 part) | |
ENZYMES | ||||
Chymotrypsin | Incompatible | 5% | 400 γ /mL | |
Trypsin | Incompatible | 5% | 400 γ /mL | |
SOLVENTS | ||||
Alcohol | Compatible | 12% | 10%-20% | |
Propylene Glycol | Compatible | 3% | 10% | |
STEROIDS | ||||
Dexamethasone Sodium Phosphate | Compatible | 16% | 0.8 mg/mL | |
Prednisolone Sodium Phosphate5 | Compatible | 16.7% | 3.3 mg/mL | |
OTHER AGENTS | ||||
Hydrogen Peroxide | Incompatible | (All ratios) | ||
Sodium Bicarbonate | Compatible | 20% (1 part) | 4.2% (1 part) |
Acetylcysteine As An Antidote For Acetaminophen Overdose |
References
Revised: November, 2004
©Hospira 2004 EN-0689 Printed in USA
HOSPIRA, INC., LAKE FOREST, IL 60045 USA