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American Journal of Health-System Pharmacy 2015-Jan

Hypoxemia associated with nimodipine in a patient with an aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage.

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Matthew Baker
Melissa Thompson Bastin
Aaron M Cook
Justin Fraser
Eugene Hessel

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Astratto

OBJECTIVE

A case of probable nimodipine-induced hypoxemia in a patient undergoing treatment for aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) is reported.

CONCLUSIONS

A 62-year-old man hospitalized for SAH developed symptoms of respiratory distress on several occasions within days of initiation of nimodipine therapy (60 mg every four hours, with three doses withheld during intubation for intracranial surgery). Several hours after extubation (on hospital day 5), the patient had rapidly worsening tachypnea and declining arterial oxygen saturation (SPO2) despite increased oxygen delivery by mask, necessitating reintubation. When a nurse noted that the declines in SPO2 occurred soon after nimodipine administration, the patient's respiratory and hemodynamic functions were closely monitored after a single dose of nimodipine via nasogastic tube; the monitoring results supported the suspicion that nimodipine's vascular effects were a causal or contributory factor in the hypoxemia episodes. With subsequent fractionated dosing (30 mg every two hours), the patient completed the prescribed 21-day course of nimodipine therapy. Using the rating scale of Naranjo et al., this case was assigned a score of 7, indicating a probable pulmonary adverse reaction to nimodipine. As nimodipine is commonly used in cases of SAH to reduce delayed neurologic deficits due to persistent cerebral vasospasm, clinicians should be mindful of its potential hypoxemic effects in vulnerable patients.

CONCLUSIONS

A patient with aneurysmal SAH developed hypoxemia associated with the administration of nimodipine. Hypoxemia is a known complication of treatment with other vasodilatory agents, particularly in patients who have concomitant pulmonary disease.

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