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Benzocaine-associated methemoglobinemia following bronchoscopy in a healthy research participant
Authors:Kuschner W G  Chitkara R K  Canfield J  Poblete-Coleman L M  Cunningham B A  Sarinas P S
Affiliation:Veterans Affairs Palo Alto Health Care System, and the Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Stanford University School of Medicine, California, USA. kuschner@stanford.edu
Abstract:Benzocaine (ethyl aminobenzoate) is a local anesthetic commonly used to achieve topical anesthesia of the skin and mucous membranes prior to endoscopic procedures. Methemoglobinemia, a condition in which hemoglobin cannot bind and deliver oxygen normally, has been associated with benzocaine use in various patient populations. This is the first report of benzocaine-associated methemoglobinemia occurring in a healthy research participant. The research participant developed a methemoglobin level of 27% and marked cyanosis. No adverse sequelae other than cyanosis were identified. This report extends the population in which benzocaine-associated methemoglobinemia has been described. Additionally, this report supports the observation that methemoglobin levels approaching 30% may be tolerated in otherwise healthy individuals, producing few clinically important effects. Finally, this case also indicates that, in obtaining informed consent for a procedure in which benzocaine will be administered, patients and research participants should be specifically informed of the risk of benzocaine-induced methemoglobinemia. This information is especially important in those settings in which the manufacturer-recommended dose of benzocaine may either intentionally or inadvertently be exceeded.
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