Contrast Media & Reactions - Glow Juice Jitters
- Contrast Media Types:
- Iodinated: Ionic (High Osmolality, ↑ reactions), Non-ionic (Low Osmolality, ↓ reactions).
- Gadolinium-based (GBCA): For MRI; risk of Nephrogenic Systemic Fibrosis (NSF) in renal impairment.
- Barium Sulfate: Oral/rectal for GI imaging.
- Reaction Classification & Timing:
- Acute: < 1 hour post-injection.
- Delayed: 1 hour to 1 week (e.g., skin rashes).
- Acute Reaction Severity:
- Mild: Nausea, vomiting, limited urticaria, pruritus, warmth, headache. Self-limiting.
- Moderate: Diffuse urticaria/erythema, bronchospasm, facial/laryngeal edema (mild), vasovagal syncope. Requires treatment.
- Severe (Anaphylactoid): Profound hypotension, severe laryngeal edema, severe bronchospasm, arrhythmias, seizure, respiratory arrest, cardiac arrest. Life-threatening. Incidence: 0.01-0.04% with LOCM.
⭐ Non-ionic low-osmolar contrast agents (LOCM) have a significantly lower incidence of severe adverse reactions (approx. 0.04%) compared to high-osmolar contrast agents (HOCA) (approx. 0.2%).
Risk Assessment & Pretesting - Red Flag Radar
Identify high-risk patients to minimize contrast reactions.
-
Key Risk Factors:
- Prior moderate/severe contrast reaction (highest risk)
- Active/uncontrolled asthma
- Multiple severe allergies (food, drugs)
- Renal disease (eGFR < 30 mL/min/1.73m²: CIN risk; NSF with specific GBCAs)
- Significant cardiac disease (e.g., unstable angina)
- Drugs: β-blockers, Metformin (hold if eGFR < 30/AKI), IL-2
-
Pre-Procedure Checks:
- Allergy & prior reaction history
- Renal function (Serum Cr, eGFR)
- Pregnancy status (if relevant)
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Premedication (prior allergic reaction / high-risk asthma):
- Steroids: Prednisolone 50mg PO (13,7,1h pre) or Methylprednisolone 32mg PO (12,2h pre)
- Antihistamine: Diphenhydramine 25-50mg (1h pre)
⭐ Prior allergic-like reaction to same class contrast: strongest predictor of future reaction (risk ↑5-6x).
Premedication & Special Considerations - Shield & Special Ops
- Premedication (Prior Allergic-like Rxn to Iodinated Contrast):
- Goal: ↓ risk/severity of breakthrough Rxns.
- Steroids:
- Oral (Elective): Prednisone 50mg (13h, 7h, 1h pre).
- IV (Urgent): Hydrocortisone 200mg / Methylprednisolone 40mg IV q4h until scan (last dose 1h pre).
- Antihistamine: Diphenhydramine 50mg IV/IM/PO 1h pre (adjunct).
- Special Populations:
- Pregnancy: Shield fetus. Iodinated contrast if essential. GBCAs: avoid unless benefit >> risk.
- Lactation: Iodinated/GBCAs <1% excreted. Interrupt breastfeeding 12-24h (optional).
- Metformin:
- eGFR ≥30 mL/min/1.73m²: Continue metformin.
- eGFR <30 mL/min/1.73m², AKI, IA contrast (renal exposure): Hold metformin. Resume 48h post if renal function stable.
- Pheochromocytoma: α & β blockade. Use non-ionic LOCM.
- Myasthenia Gravis: Risk of exacerbation. Monitor.
- Hyperthyroidism: Risk of thyroid storm. Prophylaxis if history.
⭐ In patients with prior moderate-severe allergic-like reactions, premedication reduces the incidence of mild reactions, but its efficacy in preventing severe, life-threatening reactions is not definitively established.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Prior allergic reaction to contrast: strongest predictor of future events.
- Premedication (steroids, antihistamines) for previous moderate/severe reactions.
- Assess renal function (eGFR/SCr) pre-iodinated contrast in at-risk patients.
- Metformin: hold day of contrast & 48h post if eGFR <30 mL/min/1.73m² or Acute Kidney Injury (AKI).
- Hydration is key to prevent Contrast-Induced Nephropathy (CIN).
- GBCAs: screen renal function (eGFR) to prevent Nephrogenic Systemic Fibrosis (NSF).
- Always check pregnancy/lactation status before contrast administration.
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