Antipyretic Efficacy of an Initial 30-mg/kg Loading Dose of Acetaminophen Versus a 15-mg/kg Maintenance Dose
[摘要] Objective. To compare the antipyretic efficacy of an initial 30-mg/kg acetaminophen loading dose versus a 15-mg/kg maintenance dose.Methods. A double-blind, parallel-group, randomized clinical trial was conducted. A total of 121 febrile (rectal temperature between 39°C and 40°C) but otherwise healthy outpatients who were 4 months to 9 years of age and weighed 4 to 26 kg were assigned randomly to 1 of the dose groups: 15 mg/kg ( n = 62) and 30 mg/kg ( n = 59).Results. In an “intention to treat” analysis, the time to obtain a temperature lower than 38.5°C was significantly shorter in the 30-mg/kg than in the 15-mg/kg group (110 ± 94 minutes vs 139 ± 113 minutes). The maximum temperature decrease was significantly higher in the 30-mg/kg than in the 15-mg/kg group (2.3 ± 0.7°C vs 1.7 ± 0.6°C). Duration of rectal temperature below 38.5°C was significantly longer in the 30-mg/kg than in the 15-mg/kg group (250 ± 92 minutes vs 185 ± 121 minutes, respectively). Adverse events were reported in 6 children in the 30-mg/kg group compared with 5 in the 15-mg/kg group (hyperthermia, hypothermia, vomiting). The difference was not statistically significant.Conclusion. An initial 30-mg/kg acetaminophen loading dose seemed to be more effective in reducing fever than a 15-mg/kg maintenance dose. No difference was observed regarding clinical tolerance. These data suggest that acetaminophen treatment of fever may be more efficient in an initial loading dose.
[发布日期] [发布机构]
[效力级别] [学科分类] 儿科学
[关键词] [时效性]