View clinical trials related to Poisoning.
Filter by:The axons of the retinal ganglion cells combine to form the optic nerve. The optic nerve transmits electrical signals to the visual cortex by various synapses. Optic nerve axons are more sensitive to toxins than retina because they are outside the blood retinal barrier. Methanol, various solvents and heavy metals, carbon dioxide, antiarrhythmic, antiepileptic, antibiotics and some vasoactive drugs can cause toxic optic neuropathy. There is a different pathophysiology for each toxin. Methanol is easily accessible alcohol in all types of disinfectants. Methanol is converted into formaldehyde and formic acid while metabolized in the liver. Formaldehyde disrupts ATP synthesis by blocking mitochondrial function and oxidative phosphorylation. Formic acid causes demyelination as a result of metabolic acidosis. Neuroinflammation occurs when denatured proteins block axoplasmic flow. All these processes can lead to apoptosis and permanent vision loss. Sildenafil is a vasoactive drug used in erectile dysfunction. Sildenafil decreases optic nerve head blood flow. Neuroinflammation develops secondary to the cessation of axoplasmic flow after hypoxia. If hypoxia and neuroinflammatiom persists, apoptosis and permanent vision loss develop. Amiodarone is an ion channel blocker used in the treatment of cardiac arrhythmias. Long-term use may cause disruption of ion channel balance in the optic nerve. This condition leads to asymmetric neuroinflammation and apoptosis. Wharton's jelly derived mesenchymal stem cells (WJ-MSC) can increase mitochondrial ATP synthesis with paracrine effects and suppress neuroinflammation with immunomodulatory effects. Repetitive electromagnetic stimulation (rEMS) can rearrange ion channel balances and axoplasmic flow. The aim of this prospective phase-3 clinical study is to investigate the effect of WJ-MSC and rEMS combination in the therapy of toxic optic neuropathies. This combination is the first study in the literature for the therapy of toxic optic neuropathies.
The aim of the present study is to evaluate safety and efficacy of gastric lavage with paraffin oil or gastric lavage with coconut oil in management of acute Aluminum phosphide poisoning.
Hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBO2) is recommended for symptomatic patients within 24 h of carbon monoxide (CO) poisoning. However, previous major studies found significantly better outcomes with HBO2 in patients treated within 6 h. Currently, there is no consensus on a CO poisoning-to-HBO2 interval that would not be beneficial. Therefore, the investigators aimed to evaluate the difference in therapeutic effect depending on the poisoning-to-HBO2 interval after CO exposure in patients with acute CO poisoning who received HBO2 within 24 h. The investigators compared the neurocognitive outcomes of patients according to HBO2 time intervals based on the outcomes of patients treated within 6 h (control group) with propensity score matching using the CO poisoning registry of our hospital.
A decreased level of consciousness is a common reason for presentation to the emergency department (ED) and is often the result of intoxication (up to 1% of all ED visits and 3% of ICU admission). In France, approximately 165 000 poisoned patients are managed each year. Originally developed in head injured patients, the Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS) is a validated reproducible score evaluating the level of consciousness: a GCS ≤ 8 is strongly associated with reduced gag reflex and increased incidence of aspiration pneumonia. Although recommended for patients with traumatic brain injury and coma, it remains unknown whether the benefit of an invasive management of airways with sedation, intubation and mechanical ventilation should be applied to other causes of coma in particular for acute poisoned patients. The investigator hypothesize that a conservative management with close monitoring without immediate endotracheal intubation of these patients is effective and associated with less in-hospital complications (truncated at 28 days) compared to routine practice management (in which the decision of immediate intubation is left to the discretion of the emergency physician).
This study investigated the maternal and fetal effects during performance of CSEA in the left lateral decubitus and sitting positions in obese pregnant women undergoing elective cesarean section.
Aluminum phosphide (ALP) is a widely used fumigant due to its efficiency as pesticides. It is available as tablets of Celphos, Alphos or Quickphos which are known as rice tablets. Each tablet weights 3 grams and contains 56% ALP and 44% of aluminum carbonate and paraffin. The incidence of ALP poisoning increased steadily specially in developing countries . ALP poisoning is considered to be one of the major causes of suicidal poisoning owing to its wide accessibility and low cost. However, accidental poisoning may occur during occupational exposure
Previous report showed that 37% of patients with moderate to severe carbon monoxide (CO) poisoning experienced a myocardial injury, defined as elevated cardiac enzyme [creatine kinase, CK-MB, and cardiac troponin I (TnI)] or ischemic electrocardiogram (ECG) change. In other study, 24% of the patients with the myocardial injury after CO poisoning died during a median follow-up of 7.6 years. The myocardial injury was the major predictor of mortality. In addition, in the Taiwanese nationwide population-based cohort study, CO poisoning itself reported as a higher risk of a major adverse cardiovascular event. According to the previous study of investigators, among CO poisoned patients with myocardial injury, 74.4% of patients experienced CO-induced cardiomyopathy. All CO-induced cardiomyopathy recovered to normal status. In this situation, there is no definite approved reason why more cardiovascular events are occurred in CO poisoned patients with myocardial injury during long term follow-up period despite normalization of CO-induced elevated TnI and cardiac dysfunction. Two image cases related to cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (CMR) in acute CO poisoning previously reported. One image case reported that patient had mildly depressed left ventricular (LV) systolic function with hypokinesis of the anterior wall and regional akinesis of the inferior wall on the transthoracic echocardiography performed during hospitalization and late gadolinium-enhancement (LGE) images of CMR demonstrated multiple focal areas of high signal consistent with myocardial necrosis or fibrosis. Another image case reported an image case that in CMR, inferolateral mid-wall myocardial fibrosis, which was defined as LGE, was present despite the setting of a completely normal echocardiogram at 4-month follow-up in CO poisoned patients. Therefore, the investigators evaluate prevalence (frequency of LGE positive) and patterns (involved LV wall and range of LGE positive) of myocardial fibrosis (LGE positive) in acute CO-poisoned patients during acute (within seven days after CO exposure) and chronic phase (at 4-5 months after CO exposure) and whether LGE positive developed in acute phase have been changed through cardiac MRI performed at chronic phase. The investigators also evaluate LV ejection fraction and global longitudinal strain in transthoracic echocardiography performed at the ED (baseline) and within seven days (follow-up). The investigators also assessed the association between neurocognitive outcomes using the global deterioration scale (at 1, 6, and 12 months after CO exposure) and the presence of LGE positive.
Poisoning is the deterioration of the body's functions by the ingestion of any substance being toxic to the body or by overdosing a nontoxic substance. Poisoning cases may vary according to the geographical and seasonal characteristics of the region, sociocultural structure of the population, life index and the age groups. Worldwide, intentional self-poisoning (ISP) is the most common form of suicide attempt and the most common method that results in medical hospitalization.
The study aimed to investigate the association between RDW and in-hospital mortality in methanol poisoning.
The investigators designed a monitoring and control table of a citrate treatment on a specific monitor. This is the Baxter "Prismaflex" monitor, with 8.2 software version. Dialysis bath liquids marketed by Baxter: Biphozyl are used. Citrate liquid (1:18) Regiocit is used. The dialysis treatment monitor (CVVHD) is programmed, with a blood / citrate pumps at a rate of 1:10 (1 ml / min of blood: 10 ml / h of dialysis fluid) The starting dose of citrate will be 3.5 mmol / l and the calcium compensation will be 100% Working hypothesis: The patient undergoing citrate anticoagulation according to the designed algorithm will respond with ion stability and pH during the treatment, in addition to achieving an effective cleaning process.