Hoffman R S, Stringer J A, Feinberg R S, Goldfrank L R
New York City Poison Control Center, New York University School of Medicine 10016, USA.
J Toxicol Clin Toxicol. 1999;37(7):833-7. doi: 10.1081/clt-100102462.
Although Prussian blue is considered the antidote of choice for thallium poisoning, the lack of a Food and Drug Administration-approved pharmaceutical formulation has led to the search for other adsorbents. Activated charcoal has been demonstrated to adsorb thallium in vitro, and the similarity between thallium and potassium has led some authors to consider the use of sodium polystyrene sulfonate as a potential adsorbent. This experiment was designed to compare the relative thallium binding efficacy of these agents in a standard isotherm model.
A standard aqueous solution of thallium acetate buffered to pH 7.0 was agitated at 25 degrees C with activated charcoal, Prussian blue, or sodium polystyrene sulfonate at adsorbent:thallium ratios ranging from 1.5:1 to 100:1. In order to further simulate physiologic conditions, all trials were repeated in a solution containing 4 mmol/L potassium phosphate. After thorough agitation, the mixtures were allowed to settle and were centrifuged and filtered through a 0.22-micron filter. Supernatant thallium concentrations were measured by atomic absorption spectrophotometry. Langmuir isotherms were used to calculate the maximal adsorptive capacity of each adsorbent, using linear regression with Pearson's correlation coefficients (r). Maximal adsorptive capacities were compared statistically with a p < 0.05 considered significant.
The maximal adsorptive capacities defined as milligrams of thallium per gram of adsorbent (shown with linear regression p and r values) were as follows: activated charcoal, 59.7 mg/g (p = 0.005, r = 0.995); Prussian blue, 72.7 mg/g (p = 0.004, r = 0.996); and sodium polystyrene sulfonate, 713 mg/g (p = 0.049, r = 0.951). All three values were statistically different from each other. At a physiologic potassium concentration, the maximal adsorptive capacities for activated charcoal and Prussian blue were essentially unchanged (58.3 mg/g and 69.8 mg/g, respectively, p > 0.05 for each vs trials without potassium), while the maximal adsorptive capacity for sodium polystyrene sulfonate fell to 39.1 mg/g (p = 0.003, r = 0.997, p = 0.005 vs sodium polystyrene sulfonate without potassium).
This in vitro study confirms the utility of Prussian blue and activated charcoal as thallium adsorbents. Although sodium polystyrene sulfonate demonstrates exceptional in vitro adsorption of thallium, its greater affinity for potassium probably renders it clinically ineffective.
尽管普鲁士蓝被认为是铊中毒的首选解毒剂,但由于缺乏美国食品药品监督管理局批准的药物制剂,人们开始寻找其他吸附剂。活性炭已被证明在体外能吸附铊,并且铊与钾的相似性使得一些作者考虑使用聚苯乙烯磺酸钠作为潜在的吸附剂。本实验旨在比较这些试剂在标准等温模型中对铊的相对结合效力。
将缓冲至pH 7.0的醋酸铊标准水溶液在25℃下与活性炭、普鲁士蓝或聚苯乙烯磺酸钠搅拌,吸附剂与铊的比例范围为1.5:1至100:1。为了进一步模拟生理条件,所有试验均在含有4 mmol/L磷酸钾的溶液中重复进行。充分搅拌后,让混合物沉淀,然后离心并通过0.22微米过滤器过滤。通过原子吸收分光光度法测量上清液中的铊浓度。使用朗缪尔等温线计算每种吸附剂的最大吸附容量,采用线性回归并计算皮尔逊相关系数(r)。将最大吸附容量进行统计学比较,p < 0.05被认为具有统计学意义。
以每克吸附剂吸附铊的毫克数定义的最大吸附容量(显示线性回归p值和r值)如下:活性炭为59.7 mg/g(p = 0.005,r = 0.995);普鲁士蓝为72.7 mg/g(p = 0.004,r = 0.996);聚苯乙烯磺酸钠为713 mg/g(p = 0.049,r = 0.951)。这三个值在统计学上彼此不同。在生理钾浓度下,活性炭和普鲁士蓝的最大吸附容量基本不变(分别为58.3 mg/g和69.8 mg/g,与无钾试验相比,每项p > 0.05),而聚苯乙烯磺酸钠的最大吸附容量降至39.1 mg/g(p = 0.003,r = 0.997,与无钾的聚苯乙烯磺酸钠相比,p = 0.005)。
这项体外研究证实了普鲁士蓝和活性炭作为铊吸附剂的效用。尽管聚苯乙烯磺酸钠在体外对铊具有出色的吸附能力,但其对钾的更高亲和力可能使其在临床上无效。