Indication |
For the reduction of blood levels and depot stores of lead in lead
poisoning (acute and chronic) and lead encephalopathy, in both
pediatric populations and adults. |
Pharmacodynamics |
Edetate calcium is a heavy metal chelating agent. The calcium in
edetate calcium can be displaced by divalent or trivalent metals to
form a stable water soluble complex that can be excreted in the urine.
In theory, 1 g of edetate calcium can theoretically bind 620 mg of lead,
but in reality only about 5 mg per gram is actually excreted into the
urine in lead poisoned patients. In addition to chelating lead, edetate
calcium also chelates and eliminates zinc from the body. Edetate calcium
also binds cadmium, copper, iron and manganese, but to a much lesser
extent than either lead or zinc. Edetate calcium is relatively
ineffective for use in treating mercury, gold or arsenic poisoning. |
Mechanism of action |
The pharmacologic effects of edetate calcium disodium are due to
the formation of chelates with divalent and trivalent metals. A stable
chelate will form with any metal that has the ability to displace
calcium from the molecule, a feature shared by lead, zinc, cadmium,
manganese, iron and mercury. The amounts of manganese and iron
metabolized are not significant. Copper is not mobilized and mercury is
unavailable for chelation because it is too tightly bound to body
ligands or it is stored in inaccessible body compartments. The excretion
of calcium by the body is not increased following intravenous
administration of edetate calcium disodium, but the excretion of zinc is
considerably increased. |
Absorption |
Poorly absorbed from the gastrointestinal tract. Well absorbed following intramuscular injection. |
Volume of distribution |
Not Available |
Protein binding |
Not Available |
Metabolism |
Almost none of the compound is metabolized. |
Route of elimination |
It is excreted primarily by the kidney, with about 50% excreted in
one hour and over 95% within 24 hours.2 Almost none of the compound is
metabolized. |
Half life |
The half life of edetate calcium disodium is 20 to 60 minutes. |
Clearance |
Not Available |
Toxicity |
Inadvertent administration of 5 times the recommended dose,
infused intravenously over a 24 hour period, to an asymptomatic 16 month
old patient with a blood lead content of 56 mcg/dl did not cause any
ill effects. Edetate calcium disodium can aggravate the symptoms of
severe lead poisoning, therefore, most toxic effects (cerebral edema,
renal tubular necrosis) appear to be associated with lead poisoning.
Because of cerebral edema, a therapeutic dose may be lethal to an adult
or a pediatric patient with lead encephalopathy. Higher dosage of
edetate calcium disodium may produce a more severe zinc deficiency. |
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