The Institute for Safe Medication Practices (ISMP) recently cited a report from the ISMP Canada Safety Bulletin about the death of a patient who was accidentally injected with topical epinephrine. The attending surgeon and nurse mistakenly thought the syringe they were using contained lidocaine with epinephrine 1:100,000.
ISMP noted an earlier case in which a child died from cardiac arrest after his ear was infiltrated with a syringe containing epinephrine 1:1,000 that had been filled from an open cup. The physician mistakenly assumed that the solution in the cup contained lidocaine with epinephrine 1:100,000.
ISMP recommends several steps that can help prevent fatal accidents of this kind, including:
• Supply epinephrine for topical use in a pour-bottle so that it is not likely to be injected. If these bottles are not available from the manufacturer, require the pharmacy to prepare ready-to-use doses in pour bottles or topical syringes.
• Never withdraw a topical medication into a parenteral syringe and, conversely, do not place a solution intended for injection, such as a local anesthetic, into an open container.
• Be sure that the word "topical" appears on any container holding a solution intended for topical use.
• Keep local anesthetics for injection in their original vials until they are going to be used. Then withdraw the medication into a syringe and label it immediately.
• And if possible, prepare pledgets of topical epinephrine before each procedure, which can eliminate the need for topical epinephrine in vials.
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