Dialysis May Improve Outcomes in Severe Caffeine Intoxication
Overview
A review of 216 caffeine intoxication cases from 1883 to 2023 found that extracorporeal blood purification, including hemodialysis, was associated with higher survival rates in patients with severe toxicity. Despite higher ingested doses and serum caffeine levels, patients receiving blood purification had a 95% survival compared to 73% in those who did not.
Background
Severe caffeine intoxication can cause life-threatening cardiovascular and neurologic complications, including tachycardia, convulsions, and ventricular arrhythmias. Lethal doses are generally considered to be between 5 and 10 grams. Clinical presentations vary widely even at similar caffeine doses and serum concentrations. Treatment approaches have varied historically, with no definitive guidelines established.
Data Highlights
| Parameter | Value |
|---|---|
| Number of cases reviewed | 216 |
| Median caffeine ingestion (all patients) | 12 g |
| Median serum caffeine concentration | 160 mg/L |
| Patients receiving extracorporeal blood purification | 28% |
| Survival with blood purification | 95% |
| Survival without blood purification | 73% |
| Median ingestion in blood purification group | 29 g |
| Median serum caffeine concentration in blood purification group | 185 mg/L |
Key Findings
- Severe caffeine intoxication often leads to cardiovascular (tachycardia 87%, ventricular arrhythmias up to 14%) and neurologic complications (convulsions 18%).
- Potentially lethal caffeine doses range from 5 to 10 grams, but survival has been reported even with ingestions as high as 100 grams following aggressive treatment.
- Extracorporeal blood purification was used more frequently in patients with severe arrhythmias and was associated with higher survival despite higher caffeine doses and serum levels.
- Patients with convulsions or wide-complex tachycardia had worse prognoses compared to those without these symptoms.
- Treatment approaches varied widely, with activated charcoal used in 22% and gastric decontamination in 11% of cases.
- Clinical outcomes varied significantly even among patients with similar caffeine exposures, indicating individual variability in toxicity and response.
Clinical Implications
Extracorporeal blood purification, including hemodialysis, should be considered in cases of severe caffeine intoxication, especially when potentially lethal doses are ingested or severe clinical symptoms develop. Early recognition of cardiovascular and neurologic complications is critical to guide aggressive supportive care and detoxification strategies. Given the variability in presentation, treatment should be individualized and may benefit from multidisciplinary management.
Conclusion
While definitive treatment guidelines are lacking, evidence suggests that hemodialysis and other extracorporeal blood purification methods can improve survival in severe caffeine intoxication. Clinicians should consider these therapies in patients with high-dose ingestions or severe toxicity.
Related Resources & Content
- Uehlein et al., Deutsches Ärzteblatt International, 2023 -- Dialysis May Improve Caffeine Intoxication Outcomes
This content is an AI-generated, fully rewritten summary based on a published scholarly article. It does not reproduce the original text and is not a substitute for the original publication. Readers are encouraged to consult the source for full context, data, and methodology.