%0 Journal Article %T Clinical and laboratory parameters in dapsone acute intoxication %A Carrazza %A Maria Zilda N %A Carrazza %A Francisco R %A Oga %A Seizi %J Revista de Sa¨²de P¨²blica %D 2000 %I Universidade de S?o Paulo %R 10.1590/S0034-89102000000400013 %X objective: to determine the severity of dapsone (dds) acute intoxication £¿ an uncommon medical event £¿ using clinical and laboratory parameters. methods: two hundred and seventy four patients with acute dds intoxication, aged 1 month to 50 years old, were studied and classified into four age groups. clinical evaluation was assessed through a protocol and correlated with laboratory parameters. spectrophotometric methods were used to analyze methemoglobinemia (mhbp) and dapsonemia (ddsp). results: the most prevalent clinical sign of intoxication was cyanosis, seen in 65.7% of the patients and in 100% of children less than 5 years of age. according to laboratory criteria, mhbp-related severe clinical intoxication was seen in 56.2% and ddsp-related occurred in 58% of the patients. regarding ddsp, intoxication was considered severe when 20 tablets (100 mg each) were ingested, a median of 29 mg/ml. regarding mhbp, intoxication was severe when 7.5 tablets were ingested, a median of 38% of the total hb. the correlation between mhbp and ddsp was statistically significant (n=144, r=0.32, p<0.05). negative correlation was observed between mhbp and the time elapsed since dds intake (n=124, r=-0.34, p<0.001). there was also a negative correlation between ddsp and the time elapsed since dds intake (n=63, r=-0.35, p<0.0001). conclusions: longitudinal analysis showed a significant association between methemoglobinemia and the time elapsed after the intake (t), according to the equation: dapsonemia = 12.9256 - 0.0682t + 0.234 methemoglobinemia %K dapsone [poisoning] %K methemoglobinemia [blood] %K cyanosis %K intoxication %K acute. %U http://www.scielosp.org/scielo.php?script=sci_abstract&pid=S0034-89102000000400013&lng=en&nrm=iso&tlng=en