Comparative Pharmacology
Head-to-head clinical analysis: INTRALIPID 20 versus LIPOSYN III 20.
Head-to-head clinical analysis: INTRALIPID 20 versus LIPOSYN III 20.
INTRALIPID 20% vs LIPOSYN III 20%
Comparing the clinical profiles, pharmacokinetic behaviors, and safety indices of these two therapeutic agents.
Intralipid 20% is a fat emulsion providing essential fatty acids and triglycerides. It serves as a source of calories and essential fatty acids. In parenteral nutrition, it prevents and treats essential fatty acid deficiency. In lipid rescue therapy for local anesthetic toxicity, it acts as a 'lipid sink' to sequester lipophilic drugs, and may also enhance mitochondrial fatty acid oxidation and improve cardiac contractility.
Liposyn III 20% is a lipid emulsion providing essential fatty acids (linoleic and linolenic acids) and calories. It serves as a source of energy and prevents essential fatty acid deficiency by supplying triglycerides that are hydrolyzed to free fatty acids and glycerol for metabolism.
Intravenous infusion at a rate of 0.1 g fat/kg/hour, increasing to 0.5 g fat/kg/hour if tolerated. Maximum daily dose: 2.5 g fat/kg (50 mL/kg/day of 20% emulsion).
Adults: 500 mL to 2500 mL per day via continuous intravenous infusion (including peripheral or central vein); typical rate: 0.5-1 mL/kg/h initially, increasing to 1.5-2 mL/kg/h as tolerated. Maximum infusion rate: 2.5 mL/kg/h.
None Documented
None Documented
Terminal elimination half-life of lipid particles: approximately 30 minutes for chylomicron-like particles; triglycerides half-life ~15-30 minutes. Clinical context: rapid clearance by lipoprotein lipase.
The terminal elimination half-life of infused triglycerides is approximately 0.5–1 h (33–60 min). Clearance is saturable; at high infusion rates, half-life may prolong.
Renal: negligible. Biliary/fecal: >90% as component of lipid metabolism, excretion via bile and fecal elimination of lipid particles.
Primarily eliminated via endogenous lipid metabolic pathways (beta-oxidation in tissues). <5% excreted unchanged in urine; minimal biliary/fecal elimination.
Category C
Category C
Intravenous Fat Emulsion
Intravenous Fat Emulsion