Do not Administer Methylene Blue if there is Possible Gastrointestinal Absorption
Beverly J. Newhouse MD
Anushirvan Minokadeh MD
Methylene blue is a water-soluble blue thiazine dye used most commonly as a treatment for methemoglobinemia or as an indicator dye. Its utility as an indicator dye has been applied to several clinical situations including identification of aspiration or placement of nasogastric tubes in critically ill patients; localization of parathyroid adenomas; testing of the integrity of the biliary system during hepatic surgery; and testing of the integrity of ureteral or bladder anastomoses. Additional applications of methylene blue include its use as a urinary antiseptic, reversal for chemotherapy-induced encephalopathy, a topical agent to photoinactivate viruses, an experimental cytotoxic agent for tumor cells, and a vasopressor in patients with septic or anaphylactic shock or for patients undergoing the reperfusion phase of liver transplantation.
Treatment of methemoglobinemia is the most common clinical use of methylene blue. Methemoglobin is the oxidized form of hemoglobin, created when the iron moiety changes from Fe2+ to Fe3+. This form of hemoglobin cannot bind O2 or CO2 and therefore loses its oxygen-carrying capacity and transport function, predisposing the patient to hypoxemia. Drug-induced causes of methemoglobinemia include local anesthetics (e.g., prilocaine and benzocaine) and nitrates (e.g., nitroglycerin and nitroprusside). Methylene blue, administered slowly at a dose of 1 to 2 mg/kg intravenously (IV) with a maximum dose of 7 mg/kg, is converted in vivo to leukomethylene blue, which reduces methemoglobin back to hemoglobin. Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH) is essential in the conversion to leukomethylene blue and thus, IV methylene blue administration is contraindicated in those with low endogenous NADPH (i.e., glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase [G6PD] deficiency). Without this NADPH-dependent conversion, the use of methylene blue can lead to hemolytic anemia and exacerbation of methemoglobinemia. Similarly, if too high a dose of methylene blue is given or it is given too quickly, high concentrations can accumulate and saturate the reducing pathway such that methylene blue will act as an oxidizing agent and paradoxically create more methemoglobin.