Comparative Pharmacology
Head-to-head clinical analysis: INTRALIPID 10 versus LIPOSYN 10.
Head-to-head clinical analysis: INTRALIPID 10 versus LIPOSYN 10.
INTRALIPID 10% vs LIPOSYN 10%
Comparing the clinical profiles, pharmacokinetic behaviors, and safety indices of these two therapeutic agents.
Intralipid 10% is a fat emulsion that provides essential fatty acids (linoleic and linolenic acids) and a source of energy. It acts as a carrier for fat-soluble vitamins and prevents essential fatty acid deficiency. The mechanism involves direct utilization of triglycerides for energy after hydrolysis by lipoprotein lipase.
Intravenous fat emulsion provides a source of calories and essential fatty acids as a component of parenteral nutrition. The lipid particles are metabolized similarly to endogenous chylomicrons, undergoing hydrolysis by lipoprotein lipase to release free fatty acids, which are then used for energy or stored.
Intravenous infusion. Adult: 500 mL of 10% emulsion (50 g fat) over 4-6 hours, up to 2.5 g fat/kg/day. Maximum infusion rate: 0.1 g fat/kg/hour.
Intravenous infusion: 1-2 g/kg/day (10-20 mL/kg/day) as part of parenteral nutrition, not to exceed 2.5 g/kg/day. Infusion rate: initially 0.5-1 mL/min for 30 minutes, then increase to maximum 125 mL/hour if tolerated.
None Documented
None Documented
The terminal elimination half-life of Intralipid triglycerides is approximately 30-60 minutes in adults with normal lipid metabolism. In neonates and patients with impaired clearance, half-life may be prolonged to 2-4 hours. Clinical context: half-life increases with infusion rate; at steady state, clearance is rapid due to extrahepatic lipolysis.
Lipid emulsion particles: elimination half-life of 10-15 minutes; triglycerides: terminal half-life of 1-3 hours, reflecting redistribution and clearance from adipose tissue; clinical context: half-life is dose-dependent and prolonged in hypertriglyceridemia, hepatic impairment, or sepsis.
Intralipid 10% (IV fat emulsion) is metabolized like endogenous chylomicrons; elimination is not via renal or biliary routes. Triglycerides are hydrolyzed by lipoprotein lipase, and the resulting free fatty acids are taken up by tissues. Less than 0.5% is excreted unchanged in urine. Biliary excretion of metabolites is negligible.
Renal: negligible; biliary: negligible; fecal: negligible; eliminated via peripheral lipoprotein lipase-mediated hydrolysis and subsequent metabolism of fatty acids, with CO2 production (~50-60%) and recycling into triglycerides and phospholipids; complete clearance from plasma within 24 hours of infusion cessation.
Category C
Category C
Intravenous Fat Emulsion
Intravenous Fat Emulsion