Intravenous haloperidol has been associated with torsades de pointes (TdP). These two sudden deaths were probable adverse drug reactions (ADRs) following intramuscular (IM) antipsychotics. The autopsies described lack of heart pathology and were highly compatible with the possibility of TdP in the absence of risk factors other than the accumulation of antipsychotics with a high serum peak after the last injection, leading to death within hours. The first case was a 27-year-old African-American male with schizophrenia but no medical issues. His death was probably caused by repeated IM haloperidol injections of 10 mg (totaling 35 mg in 2 days). The second case involves a 42-year-old African-American female with metabolic syndrome. Her probable cause of death was the last ziprasidone IM injection of 20 mg in addition to (1) three extra haloperidol doses (2 hours before the ziprasidone injection, 5 mg oral haloperidol; approximately 21 hours earlier, 5 mg oral haloperidol; and 2 days prior, one 10 mg IM haloperidol injection), (2) 10 mg/day of scheduled oral haloperidol for 6 days before death, and (3) a long-acting paliperidone injection of 156 mg 18 days before death. The study of haloperidol glucuronidation and its impairment in some African-Americans is urgently recommended.
Forty-seven preterm infants, who were previously enrolled in a prospective, randomized, blinded study at birth to assess the effects of multiple doses of exogenous bovine surfactant to prevent respiratory distress syndrome, underwent lung function evaluation and review of their medical histories at 2 1/2 years of age. During their initial hospitalization there were no differences between the 17 control infants and the 30 surfactant-treated infants in the duration of ventilator or oxygen therapy and the incidence of bronchopulmonary dysplasia. At the follow-up both groups were similar in chronological and corrected ages, weights, lengths, and sex ratios and there were no differences in the occurrence of allergy, asthma, bronchiolitis, eczema, pneumonia, and wheezing. In addition, there was no significant difference regarding the incidence of chest illnesses lasting either 3 or 7 days and in the total number of required rehospitalizations. Functional residual capacity (FRC), tidal volume (VT/kg), compliance (Crs/kg), resistance (Rrs), and time constant of the respiratory system were not significantly different between the two groups at 2 1/2 years of age. We conclude that bovine surfactant, when given during the neonatal period, has little long-term effect on lung function. Neonatal bovine surfactant therapy neither improves nor produces any adverse effects on the developing respiratory system.
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