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"Intravenous lipid emulsions (ILEs) provide essential fatty acids during parenteral nutrition (PN). Serious adverse events including death can occur from overdose. We report an accidental overdose in a preterm infant" Ryan et al (2023).

Neonatal lipid overdose case study

Abstract:

Background: Intravenous lipid emulsions (ILEs) provide essential fatty acids during parenteral nutrition (PN). Serious adverse events including death can occur from overdose. We report an accidental overdose in a preterm infant.

Method: On Day 2 of life, a 29-week gestational age (GA) twin was accidentally given 47.5 mL of Intralipid20% (≈3x daily amount) in 50-minutes.

Results: No apparent clinical deterioration occurred, although blood samples were lipemic. Outcomes at 2 years corrected GA were similar to that of his twin. Service changes were made to infusion packaging and administration to avoid similar errors.

Conclusions: Medication errors in neonates are unfortunately common. Published articles usually focus on poor outcomes, which can increase the distress for parents of children where errors have occurred. Publishing the full spectrum of outcomes instead allows parents and professionals to be aware of all possibilities and lessons learnt, even if serious harm was avoided.


Reference:

Ryan MS, McIntyre J, Bramwell LD, Ojha S. Accidental lipid overdose in a preterm infant: A case report. J Neonatal Perinatal Med. 2023 Sep 14. doi: 10.3233/NPM-231221. Epub ahead of print. PMID: 37718874.

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