BACKGROUND: Thallium is a highly toxic compound and is occasionally involved in intentional overdoses or criminal poisonings. Accidental poisonings also occur, but are increasingly rare owing to restricted use and availability of thallium. We report a fatal suicidal ingestion of thallium sulfate rodenticide in which multi-dose activated charcoal (MDAC) and Prussian Blue (PB) were both used without changing the outcome. CASE REPORT: A 36 year old man ingested an unknown amount of thallium sulfate grains from an old rodenticide bottle. He presented to an emergency department (ED) 45 minutes later with abdominal pain and vomiting. On examination he was agitated with a blood pressure of 141/60 mmHg and a heart rate of 146 beats per minute (bpm). He received MDAC during his initial ED management and was started on PB 18 hours post arrival; he was intubated on the following day for airway protection. The patient continued to be tachycardic and hypertensive and subsequently developed renal failure. On hospital day three, the patient developed hypotension that did not respond to fluids. The patient required vasopressors and was transferred to a tertiary care center to undergo continuous renal replacement therapy (CRRT). The patient died shortly after his transfer. His last blood thallium concentration was 5369 mcg/L, a spot urine thallium >2000 mcg/L, and a 24- hour urine thallium was >2000 mcg/L. CONCLUSION: Though extremely rare, thallium intoxication can be lethal despite early administration of MDAC and use of Prussian blue therapy. Rapid initiation of hemodialysis can be considered in cases of severe thallium poisoning, to remove additional thallium, to correct acid-base disturbance, or to improve renal function.
BACKGROUND:Thallium is a highly toxic compound and is occasionally involved in intentional overdoses or criminal poisonings. Accidental poisonings also occur, but are increasingly rare owing to restricted use and availability of thallium. We report a fatal suicidal ingestion of thallium sulfate rodenticide in which multi-dose activated charcoal (MDAC) and Prussian Blue (PB) were both used without changing the outcome. CASE REPORT: A 36 year old man ingested an unknown amount of thallium sulfate grains from an old rodenticide bottle. He presented to an emergency department (ED) 45 minutes later with abdominal pain and vomiting. On examination he was agitated with a blood pressure of 141/60 mmHg and a heart rate of 146 beats per minute (bpm). He received MDAC during his initial ED management and was started on PB 18 hours post arrival; he was intubated on the following day for airway protection. The patient continued to be tachycardic and hypertensive and subsequently developed renal failure. On hospital day three, the patient developed hypotension that did not respond to fluids. The patient required vasopressors and was transferred to a tertiary care center to undergo continuous renal replacement therapy (CRRT). The patient died shortly after his transfer. His last blood thallium concentration was 5369 mcg/L, a spot urine thallium >2000 mcg/L, and a 24- hour urine thallium was >2000 mcg/L. CONCLUSION: Though extremely rare, thallium intoxication can be lethal despite early administration of MDAC and use of Prussian blue therapy. Rapid initiation of hemodialysis can be considered in cases of severe thalliumpoisoning, to remove additional thallium, to correct acid-base disturbance, or to improve renal function.
Authors: Richard C Dart; Stephen W Borron; E Martin Caravati; Daniel J Cobaugh; Steven C Curry; Jay L Falk; Lewis Goldfrank; Susan E Gorman; Stephen Groft; Kennon Heard; Ken Miller; Kent R Olson; Gerald O'Malley; Donna Seger; Steven A Seifert; Marco L A Sivilotti; Tammi Schaeffer; Anthony J Tomassoni; Robert Wise; Gregory M Bogdan; Mohammed Alhelail; Jennie Buchanan; Jason Hoppe; Eric Lavonas; Sara Mlynarchek; Dong-Haur Phua; Sean Rhyee; Shawn Varney; Amy Zosel Journal: Ann Emerg Med Date: 2009-05-05 Impact factor: 5.721
Authors: M L Malbrain; G L Lambrecht; E Zandijk; P A Demedts; H M Neels; W Lambert; A P De Leenheer; R L Lins; R Daelemans Journal: J Toxicol Clin Toxicol Date: 1997
Authors: Syed Ali Musstjab Akber Shah Eqani; Zafar Iqbal Tanveer; Chi Qiaoqiao; Alessandra Cincinelli; Zafeer Saqib; Sikandar I Mulla; Nadeem Ali; Ioannis A Katsoyiannis; Mustafa Nawaz Shafqat; Heqing Shen Journal: Environ Sci Pollut Res Int Date: 2017-10-11 Impact factor: 4.223
Authors: Lesya B Zavaliy; Sergey S Petrikov; Anastasia Yu Simonova; Mikhail M Potskhveriya; Fahimehsadat Zaker; Yuri N Ostapenko; Kapitalina K Ilyashenko; Tatyana I Dikaya; Olga B Shakhova; Anatoly K Evseev; Ramin Rezaee; Irina V Goroncharovskaya Journal: Toxicol Rep Date: 2021-01-24