Conclusion
Intramuscular cobinamide was effective in improving survival in this large swine model of severe hydrogen sulfide toxicity.
Methods
Eleven swine (45-55 kg) were anesthetized, intubated, and instrumented with continuous femoral and pulmonary artery pressure monitoring. After stabilization, anesthesia was adjusted such that animals ventilated spontaneously with a FiO2 of 0.21. Sodium hydrosulfide (NaHS, 8 mg/mL) was infused intravenously at 0.9 mg/kg.min until apnea or severe hypotension. Animals were randomly assigned to receive cobinamide (4 mg/kg), or no treatment at the apnea/hypotension trigger. The NaHS infusion rate was sustained for 1.5 min post trigger, decreased to 0.2 mg/kg.min for 10 min, and then discontinued.
Results
The amount of NaHS required to produce apnea or hypotension was not statistically different in both groups (cobinamide: 9.0 mg/kg ±6.1; saline: 5.9 mg/kg ±5.5; mean difference: -3.1, 95% CI: -11.3, 5.0). All of the cobinamide treated animals survived (5/5), none of the control (0/6) animals survived (p < .01). Mean time to return to spontaneous ventilation in the cobinamide treated animals was 3.2 (±1.1) min. Time to return to baseline systolic blood pressure (±5%) in cobinamide-treated animals was 5 min.
