J Korean Soc Clin Toxicol.  2010 Dec;8(2):113-121.

Drug induced Pulmonary Edema

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Emergency Medicine, College of Medicine, Soonchunhyang University, Korea. 43210@schmc.ac.kr

Abstract

PURPOSE
Drug-induced non-cardiogenic pulmonary edema has been reported on in a drug case series. For most of the agents that cause pulmonary edema, the pathogenic mechanisms that are responsible for the pulmonary edema remain unknown. We report here on the cases of suspected drug-induced pulmonary edema and we analyze the clinical characteristics.
METHODS
We reviewed the medical records of 1,345 patients who had drug adverse effects and drug poisoning from January 2005 to July 2010, and 480 of these patients were admitted to the EM Department. Among them, 17 patients developed abnormal chest radiological findings and they were analyzed for any clinical characteristics, the initial symptoms, securing the airway and the clinical results.
RESULTS
Seventeen patients out of 480 (3.54%) developed drug-induced abnormal chest radiographic pulmonary edema; they displayed initial symptoms that included mental change (41.2%), dyspnea (17.6%), vomiting (11.8%), etc, and some displayed no symptoms at all (11.8%). Only 3 patients out of the 11 who died or had severe pulmonary edema were able to obtain an advanced airway prior to their arrival to the EM Department. Clinical recovery was generally rapid and this was mostly completed within 6 hours. The mortality rate was 11.8% (2 of 17 patients), and the causative drugs were found to be propofol (35.3%, 6 of 17 patients), multiple drugs (41.2% or 7 out of 17) and one patient each with ephedrine, ethylene glycol, doxylamine and an unknown drug, respectively.
CONCLUSION
Drug-induced pulmonary edema and deaths are not uncommon, and recovery is typically rapid with few long-term sequelae when drug administration is discontinued. Oxygen therapy and securing the airway must be performed during transportation for patients with pulmonary edema.

Keyword

Drug-induced; Pulmonary Edema; Propofol

MeSH Terms

Doxylamine
Dyspnea
Ephedrine
Ethylene Glycol
Ethylenes
Humans
Medical Records
Oxygen
Propofol
Pulmonary Edema
Thorax
Transportation
Vomiting
Doxylamine
Ephedrine
Ethylene Glycol
Ethylenes
Oxygen
Propofol
Full Text Links
  • JKSCT
Actions
Cited
CITED
export Copy
Close
Share
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
Similar articles
Copyright © 2024 by Korean Association of Medical Journal Editors. All rights reserved.     E-mail: koreamed@kamje.or.kr