PROTAMINE
1. INTRODUCTION
Protamine sulfate is a strongly basic (cationic) polypeptide derived from fish sperm that is used primarily as a heparin antagonist.
- Neutralizes unfractionated heparin (UFH) completely
- Partially reverses low molecular weight heparin (LMWH)
- Minimal effect on fondaparinux
2. MECHANISM OF ACTION
Inhibits heparin-mediated activation of Antithrombin III
- Restores activity of:
- Thrombin (Factor IIa)
- Factor Xa
3. PHARMACOKINETICS
|
Parameter |
Details |
|
Route |
IV only |
|
Onset |
Immediate (within 1–2 min) |
|
Peak effect |
~5 min |
|
Duration |
30–60 min |
Important:
- Heparin may rebound after protamine wears off
4. INDICATIONS
Primary Indications
- Heparin reversal
- Cardiac surgery (post-CPB)
- ECMO decannulation
- Dialysis-related bleeding
- ICU bleeding on UFH
- Heparin overdose
- Urgent invasive procedures
- CVC insertion in anticoagulated patient
- Surgery
5. DOSING
A. Unfractionated Heparin (UFH)
1 mg protamine neutralizes ~100 units of UFH
Dose calculation:
- If heparin given within last 30 min → full reversal
- 30–60 min → 50% dose
- 2 hours → minimal dose
|
Time since heparin |
Protamine dose |
|
< 30 min |
1 mg per 100 units |
|
30–60 min |
0.5 mg per 100 units |
|
60–120 min |
0.25 mg per 100 units |
Max single dose: 50 mg
B. LMWH (e.g., enoxaparin)-Only ~60–75% reversal
|
Situation |
Dose |
|
< 8 hr |
1 mg protamine per 1 mg enoxaparin |
|
8–12 hr |
0.5 mg per 1 mg |
|
>12 hr |
Usually not needed |
C. Fondaparinux
- No effective reversal with protamine
6. ADMINISTRATION
- Route: Slow IV infusion
- Rate: NOT > 5 mg/min
Rapid infusion → catastrophic reactions
7. ADVERSE EFFECTS
A. Cardiovascular collapse
- Severe hypotension
- Bradycardia
- Pulmonary hypertension
B. Protamine reaction (ANAPHYLACTOID)
Mechanism:
- Complement activation
- Histamine release
Risk factors:
- Previous protamine exposure
- diabetes mellitus on NPH insulin
- Fish allergy
- Vasectomy (anti-protamine antibodies)
C. Pulmonary vasoconstriction
- Acute pulmonary hypertension
- Right ventricular failure
- Seen especially post-cardiac surgery
D. Paradoxical anticoagulation
- High dose protamine → anticoagulant effect
8. PROTAMINE REACTION TYPES
|
Type |
Mechanism |
Features |
|
Type I |
Direct histamine release |
Mild hypotension |
|
Type II |
IgE/IgG-mediated |
Anaphylaxis |
|
Type III |
Complement activation |
Pulmonary HTN, RV failure |
2. PROPHYLACTIC REGIMENS
A. Antihistamines
- H1 blocker:
- Chlorpheniramine 10 mg IV
OR - Diphenhydramine 25–50 mg IV
- H2 blocker:
- Ranitidine 50 mg IV
OR - Famotidine
Reduces histamine-mediated hypotension
B. Corticosteroids
- Hydrocortisone 100–200 mg IV
OR - Methylprednisolone
Prevents delayed / severe reactions (limited immediate effect but commonly used)
C. Test dose
- Give 5–10 mg protamine slowly over 5–10 min
- Observe for:
- Hypotension
- Bronchospasm
- Pulmonary hypertension
If tolerated → proceed with full dose
D. Slow infusion
- Infusion rate: ≤ 5 mg/min
- Dilute in NS and give via infusion pump
This is the single most effective preventive measure
