U01.16.026 Methemoglobin

Learning Objectives

Understand the pathophysiology of Methemoglobinemia. Master the biochemical shift from ferrous (Fe2+) to ferric (Fe3+) iron, identify common inducing agents, and recognize the classic clinical presentation and treatment for the USMLE Step 1.


1. The Biochemical Shift: Fe2+ vs. Fe3+

Normal hemoglobin contains iron in the reduced ferrous (Fe2+) state, which is capable of binding oxygen. In methemoglobin, iron is oxidized to the ferric (Fe3+) state.

State Mnemonic O2 Binding Ability
Ferrous (Fe2+) “Just the 2 of us” (Fe and O2) Normal; binds O2 effectively.
Ferric (Fe3+) “Ferric is 3-freakish” Reduced; does not bind O2.

The “Left Shift” Trap: Not only does the Fe3+ subunit fail to bind oxygen, but it also increases the affinity of the remaining Fe2+ subunits for oxygen. This prevents oxygen from being released to the tissues, causing tissue hypoxia.


2. Clinical Presentation and Causes

Methemoglobinemia is a clinical emergency often triggered by specific medications or environmental exposures.

Category Details
Common Inducers Dapsone, Local anesthetics (Benzocaine), Nitrites (polluted water/well water), Sulfonamides.
Physical Exam Cyanosis (bluish skin) and Chocolate-colored blood.
Classic Clue Cyanosis that does not improve with 100% supplemental oxygen.

3. Management and Cyanide Connection

Methemoglobinemia has a unique relationship with Cyanide poisoning and specific antidotes.

Management Type Intervention Mechanism
Acute Treatment Methylene Blue Acts as an electron donor to reduce Fe3+ back to Fe2+.
Chronic/Adjunct Vitamin C Reducing agent (slower than Methylene Blue).
Cyanide Antidote Nitrites (to induce MetHb) Fe3+ binds cyanide tightly, pulling it away from cytochrome c oxidase.

Activity:


High-Yield Clinical Pearls:

  • The Pulse Ox Gap: Conventional pulse oximetry is unreliable in methemoglobinemia; it often stays around 85% regardless of the true oxygen levels.
  • O2 Parameters: In methemoglobinemia, PaO2 is normal (dissolved O2 is fine), but SaO2 and Total O2 content are decreased.
  • Newborns: Infants are more susceptible because they have lower levels of NADH-methemoglobin reductase, the enzyme that normally keeps iron in the Fe2+ state.

Activity: