For acetaminophen (Paracetamol) toxicity:
a) A 2–3 hour wait between activated charcoal and PO administration of acetylcysteine (NAC) is necessary. Give NAC as an initial oral loading dose of 140 mg/kg (dilute to 5% in dextrose or sterile water), followed by 70 mg/kg PO four times daily (q6h) for 7 treatments. With ingestion of massive quantities, some authors suggest using a 280 mg/kg loading dose and continuing treatment for 12–17 doses. May also be given IV after diluting to 5% and given via slow IV over 15–20 minutes. Additional therapy may include IV fluids, blood or Oxyglobin®, ascorbic acid and SAMe. (Wismer 2006)
b) 150 mg/kg PO or IV initially, then 50 mg/kg q4h for 17 additional doses (Bailey 1986)
c) Loading dose of 140 mg/kg PO, then 70 mg/kg PO every 6 hours for 7 treatments (Grauer & Hjelle 1988)
For phenol toxicity:
a) 140 mg/kg PO or IV initially, then 50 mg/kg q4h for 3 days. May be partially effective to reduce hepatic and renal injury. Resultant methemoglobinemia should be treated with ascorbic acid or methylene blue. (Dorman & Dye 2005)
For hepatotoxicity secondary to xylitol poisoning:
a) Acetylcysteine at 140–280 mg/kg loading dose IV, PO; followed by 70 mg/kg four times daily; vitamin K (phytonadione) at 1.25–2.5 mg/kg PO twice daily; plasma, SAMe at 20 mg/kg/day PO; vitamin E at 100–400 Units twice daily PO; and silymarin 20–50 mg/kg/day PO. (Talcott 2008)
For degenerative myelopathy:
a) 25 mg/kg PO q8h for 2 weeks, then q8h every other day. The 20% solution should be diluted to 5% with chicken broth or suitable diluent.
Used in conjunction with aminocaproic acid (500 mg per dog PO q8h indefinitely). Other treatments may include prednisone (0.25–0.5 mg/kg PO daily for 10 days then every other day), Vitamin C (1000 mg PO q12h) and Vitamin E (1000 Units PO q12h). Note: No treatment has been shown to be effective in published trials. (Shell 2003)