Literature DB >> 21370943

Pharmacobezoars described and demystified.

Serge-Emile Simpson1.   

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: A bezoar is a concretion of foreign material that forms and persists in the gastrointestinal tract. Bezoars are classified by their material origins. Phytobezoars contain plant material, trichobezoars contain hair, lactobezoars contain milk proteins, and pharmacobezoars contain pharmaceutical products. Tablets, suspensions, and even insoluble drug delivery vehicles can, on rare occasions, and sometimes under specific circumstances, form pharmacobezoars. The goal of this review is to catalog and examine all of the available reports in the English language medical literature that convincingly describe the formation and management of pharmacobezoars.
METHODS: Articles included in this review were identified by performing searches using the terms "bezoar," "pharmacobezoar," and "concretion" in the following databases: OVID MEDLINE, PubMed, and JSTOR. The complete MEDLINE and JSTOR holdings were included in the search without date ranges. The results were limited to English language publications. Articles that described nonmedication bezoars were not included in the review. Articles describing phytobezoars, food bezoars, fecal impactions, illicit drug packet ingestions, enteral feeding material bezoars, and hygroscopic diet aid bezoars were excluded. The bibliographic references within the articles already accumulated were then examined in order to gather additional pharmacobezoar cases. The cases are grouped by pharmaceutical agent that formed the bezoar, and groupings are arranged in alphabetical order. Discussions and conclusions specific to each pharmaceutical agent are included in that agent's subheading. DISCUSSION: Patterns and themes that emerged in the review of the assembled case reports are reviewed and presented in a more concise format.
CONCLUSION: Pharmacobezoars form under a wide variety of circumstances and in a wide variety of patients. They are difficult to diagnose reliably. Rules for suspecting, diagnosing, and properly managing a pharmacobezoar are highly dependent on the pharmaceutical agent or agents involved. Becoming familiar with the sparse data available on pharmacobezoars and maintaining a high index of suspicion in future clinical encounters may be the best way to improve diagnostic sensitivity and accuracy.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2011        PMID: 21370943     DOI: 10.3109/15563650.2011.559472

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Toxicol (Phila)        ISSN: 1556-3650            Impact factor:   4.467


  12 in total

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2.  A rare cause of mechanical intestinal obstruction: Pharmacobezoar.

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Review 3.  Gastrointestinal bezoars: history and current treatment paradigms.

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Review 4.  When a cure becomes the pathology: mechanical bowel obstruction due to herbal pharmacobezoar. A case report with review of literature.

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Journal:  J Intensive Care Soc       Date:  2017-02-20

6.  Curse of the ghost pills: the role of oral controlled-release formulations in the passage of empty intact shells in faeces. Two case reports and a literature review relevant to psychiatry.

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7.  A Randomized, Placebo-Controlled, Double-Blind, Dose Escalation, Single Dose, and Steady-State Pharmacokinetic Study of 9cUAB30 in Healthy Volunteers.

Authors:  Jill M Kolesar; Shannon Andrews; Heather Green; Tom C Havighurst; Barbara W Wollmer; Katina DeShong; Douglas E Laux; Helen Krontiras; Donald D Muccio; KyungMann Kim; Clinton J Grubbs; Margaret G House; Howard L Parnes; Brandy M Heckman-Stoddard; Howard H Bailey
Journal:  Cancer Prev Res (Phila)       Date:  2019-09-04

8.  Methadone Gastrobezoar in a Psychiatric Patient Presented in Coma.

Authors:  Alexandra Gavala; Despoina Manou; Vasiliki Psalida; Maria Nystatzaki; Christos Mavrogiannis; George Alevizopoulos; Pavlos Myrianthefs
Journal:  Indian J Crit Care Med       Date:  2017-11

9.  Gastric electrical stimulation for the treatment of obesity: from entrainment to bezoars-a functional review.

Authors:  Martin P Mintchev
Journal:  ISRN Gastroenterol       Date:  2013-02-07

10.  Role of Laparoscopy in the Management of Acute Surgical Abdomen Secondary to Phytobezoars.

Authors:  Abu Baker Sheikh; Aisha Akhtar; Adeel Nasrullah; Shujaul Haq; Haider Ghazanfar
Journal:  Cureus       Date:  2017-06-17
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