Aluminium phosphide is an pesticide which now is the leading cause of death from poisoning in Iran. Nowadays in Loghman hospital -where I spend my toxicology course- there are 2-3 aluminium phosphide poisoning daily and unfortunately with a mortality rate of nearly 100 percent. My first encounter with this poison was in Rasht's Razi hospital where I spent my internship 3 years ago and there were same mortality.
Toxicity is known to be due to phophine gas which release from aluminium phosphide when encounter with water. The sign ad symptoms include profound GI symptoms (abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea), agitation, seizure and cardiovascular collapse. The most important lab finding is profound metabolic acidosis which is probably a poor prognostic factor. Patients are surprisingly well and be critically ill just in minutes. The victims have a distinct odor something like decayed rice and bleech together. Vomiting usually is white and often foamy too. Detoriation begins with increased agitation although patient is completely alert, patient usually tell the physician that he/she feels the death and plea the doctor to help him/her. Metabolic acidosis become worse and worse despite great effort to its correction and a resistant cardiogenc shock develops. In EKG there are at least two findings: QRS complexes become wide and QT intervals increase. Patients suddenly develop a deadly ventricular dysrythmia usually torsade points or vf and sometimes pulseless vt; and this is the time when death arrives.
Gastric lavage with N/S or water is somewhat contraindicated and lavage is done with sodium bicarbonate and potassium permanganate. Charcoal probably has no benefit and if containing water has harm too. Some clinicians gavage mineral or natural oil to patients. The corner stone of management is correction of metabolic acidosis with as much sodium bicarbonate as possible. Therapies such calcium gluconate, magnesium sulfate, n-acetyl cystein are recommended but none of them are effective in clinic. For correction of shock norepinephrine is superior to dopamine which usually fail to correct shock, however in most cases a combination of these two vasopressors are recommended. Ventricular dysrhythmias are refractory to defibrillation and any drug, consider over drive pacing for torsades de pointes . Early intubation of patients seems reasonable before profound shock make it difficult to RSI patient. Early intubation has the benefit to use hyperventilation for acidosis correction.
A real case:
A 17 y/o girl ingested 2 aluminium phosphide tablets, referred to our center from a nearby city. She ingested tabs 4 hours before arrival. In arrival she was completely alert but agitated, complained of severe abdominal pain and nausea, BP: just carotid pulse was palpable, PR:180, RR:45, O2sat: not detectable. She was intubated using awake technique, 2 liters of isotonic saline from 2 large bore peripheral IVs started and 2 vials (100meq) of sodium bicarbonate administered empirically. In EKG monitoring she had wide complex tachycardia with obvious AV dissociation and treated with 120J biphasc synchronised cardioversion, rhythm converted to a narrow complex sinus tachycardia with a rate of 125 but BP was not increased. In ABG she had severe metabolic acidosis PH:7.01 HCO3:7 PCO2:12 PaO2:68. 2 more sodium bicarbonate vials administered, norepinephrine started, 1 gr calcium gluconate and 2 gr magnesium both slowly administered too. Just 30 minutes after arrival a cardiac arrest with VF rhythm developed. CPR started with cardiac massage and early defibrillation with 200j baphasic d.c. current but the rhythm was resistant. In the next 45 minutes CPR was continued, patient rhythm was converted from VF to PEA then asystole, again VF then torsades de pointes. Patient received 8 mg epinephrine, 3 mgr atropine, 8 vials sodium bicarbonate, 4 gr magnesium, 2 gr calcium gluconate, 450 mgr amiodarone and 18 d.c shock during CPR and overdrive pacing for torsades de pointes was done which was not successful. After 45 minutes of CPR patient had a weak central pulse (just carotid) with a wide complex bradycardia which was paced successfully to a rate of 75. Patient was transferred to ICU immediately but unfortunately she had a cardiac arrest 30 minutes later and this time despite 45 minutes CPR she dead.
Note: This is the typical course of disease, PLEASE DON"T TRY THIS POISON
کتاب چرا به یاد میآوریم؟ نوشته چاران رانگانات – معرفی و بررسی
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چاران رانگانات: کاشف رازهای حافظه و عملکرد مغز چاران رانگانات، عصبشناس
برجسته و متخصص علوم شناختی، به مطالعه حافظه و چگونگی کارکرد آن در مغز انسان
شهرت ...
2 hours ago
5 comments:
Thanks for this useful post!
But, I think this poisoning should be kind of accidental one,isn't it?
Could you please tell me what is the commonest OD in Iran?
accidental? no, I say surely all of them are suicidal and young females.
What do you mean of OD? Do you mean occupational disease?
OD:Over dosage!
Here most of ODs are depression, borderline disorder.Most of them will survive and be discharged after couple of hours to days!!
rarely leads to death!
Here mostly benzodiazepines and then opioids. Same as your experience a benign course is predictable for most of the cases.
Sorry, I should write "Here most of ODs are DUE TO depression, borderline disorder."
the Ods are the same as Iran, but the most common one is paracetamol!
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