| Literature DB >> 27548193 |
Alexandra Perkins1,2, Frederick Walters3, Jennifer Sievert4, Blaine Rhodes5, Barbara Morrissey6, Catherine J Karr7,8.
Abstract
Paresthesias have previously been reported among adults in occupational and non-occupational settings after dermal contact with pyrethroid insecticides. In this report, we describe a preverbal 13-month-old who presented to his primary care pediatrician with approximately 1 week of odd facial movements consistent with facial paresthesias. The symptoms coincided with a period of repeat indoor spraying at his home with a commercially available insecticide containing two active ingredients in the pyrethroid class. Consultation by the Northwest Pediatric Environmental Health Specialty Unit and follow-up by the Washington State Department of Health included urinary pyrethroid metabolite measurements during and after the symptomatic period, counseling on home clean up and use of safer pest control methods. The child's symptoms resolved soon after home cleanup. A diagnosis of pesticide-related illness due to pyrethroid exposure was made based on the opportunity for significant exposure (multiple applications in areas where the child spent time), supportive biomonitoring data, and the consistency and temporality of symptom findings (paresthesias). This case underscores the vulnerability of children to uptake pesticides, the role of the primary care provider in ascertaining an exposure history to recognize symptomatic illness, and the need for collaborative medical and public health efforts to reduce significant exposures in children.Entities:
Keywords: biomonitoring; child; insecticide; paresthesia; pediatric; pesticide; pyrethroid
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27548193 PMCID: PMC4997515 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph13080829
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Pesticide active ingredient applications and symptom timeline.
| 10/16/13 | 10/22/13 | 10/24–10/31/13 | 10/30/13 | 11/1/13 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Asymptomatic | Odd Facial Movements Develop and Persist, Resolve in First Week of November | ||||
| Indoor: | Indoor: bifenthrin (0.05%) and zeta-cypermethrin (0.0125%) applied to play room, kitchen, living room, and master bath | Cessation of pesticide use | |||
| Outdoor: fipronil (0.06%) applied to foundation; Indoor: chlorfenapyr (0.5%) and imidacloprid (0.05%) as crevice treatment in kitchen and master bathroom; sodium tetraborate decahydrate gel applied to window sill of master bath | Outdoor: bifenthrin (7.9%) applied to foundation; Indoor: pyrethrins, piperonyl butoxide, and amorphous silica as crevice treatment in master bathroom; sodium tetraborate decahydrate gel applied to window sill in master bath | ||||
Pyrethroid urinary metabolite concentrations (µg/g Creatinine).
| 11/01/13 (Symptomatic) | 12/20/13 (Symptoms Resolved) | WA Children, 2010–2011 3 6–11 Years 50th Percentile (95% CI) | WA Children, 2010–2011 3 6–11 Years 95th Percentile (95% CI) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2.22 | 0.329 | 0.53 (0.41–0.69) | 7.47 (2.86–15.4) | |
| 3.82 | 0.453 | (<LOD–0.421) | 2.61 (1.4–15.8) |
1 3-PBA (3-phenoxybenzoic acid) is a general metabolite of pyrethroid pesticides; 2 trans-DCCA (trans-(2,2-dichlorovinyl)-2,2-dimethylcyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid) is a metabolite of permethrin, cypermethrin, and cyfluthrin; 3 Washington (WA) environmental biomonitoring survey, May 2010–June 2011 [10]. Washington State Department of Health; CI: confidence interval; LOD: limit of detection.