| Literature DB >> 28695492 |
Kavinda Chandimal Dayasiri1, Shaluka F Jayamanne2, Chamilka Y Jayasinghe2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Pesticides are identified as one of the dangerous poisons globally in children and are associated with increased short- and long-term morbidity. Pesticide poisoning is the most common method of self-poisoning among adults in rural Sri Lanka, and the clinical management is associated with significant healthcare costs to the country. There is however little data published on acute pesticide poisoning among children in rural Sri Lanka. The current study aimed to comprehensively evaluate clinical profiles, harmful first aid measures, emergency clinical management, complications and outcomes related to acute pesticide poisoning among children in the rural community of Sri Lanka.Entities:
Keywords: Children; Patterns; Pesticide poisoning
Year: 2017 PMID: 28695492 PMCID: PMC5503850 DOI: 10.1186/s12245-017-0148-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Emerg Med ISSN: 1865-1372
Demographic characteristics, patterns of poisoning and transfer rates of children with pesticide poisoning
| Variable | Retrospective study ( | THA study ( | DGHP study ( | RDHS study ( | Total ( |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Male/female | 25:24 | 23:14 | 27:19 | 17:6 | 92:63 |
| 2. <5 years:>5 years | 40:9 | 25:12 | 31:15 | 18:5 | 114:41 |
| 3. Unintentional/intentional | 47:2 | 31:6 | 44:2 | 22:1 | 144:11 |
| 4. Mortality | 1 (2%) | 1 (2.7%) | 1 (2.17%) | – | 3 (1.9%) |
| 5. Most common poison | Carbamates | OP | OP | OP | OP |
| 6. Transfer rate | 28 (57.1%) | 30 (81.1%) | 17 (37.0%) | 15 (65.2%) | 90 (58.1%) |
DGHP District General Hospital Polonnaruwa, RDHS Regional Director of Health Services, THA Anuradhapura Teaching Hospital, OP organophosphate pesticides
Demographic characteristics and patterns of poisoning of children with pesticide poisoning
| Pesticide | THA retrospective series ( | THA prospective series ( | DGHP prospective series ( | RDHS prospective series ( | Total ( |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Organophosphate insecticides | 10 (20.4%) | 17 (45.9%) | 24 (52.1%) | 12 (52.1%) | 63 (40.6%) |
| 2. Carbamate insecticides | 20 (40.7%) | 5 (13.5%) | 4 (8.6%) | 7 (30.4%) | 36 (23.3%) |
| 3. Herbicides | 4 (8.2%) | 5 (13.5%) | 9 (19.5%) | 1 (4.3%) | 19 (12.3%) |
| 4. Rodenticides | 6 (12.3%) | 3 (8.1%) | 3 (24.1%) | 1 (4.3%) | 13 (8.4%) |
| 5. Pyrethroid insecticides | 4 (8.2%) | 2 (5.4%) | 4 (8.6%) | 2 (8.6%) | 12 (7.7%) |
| 6. Fungicides | – | 3 (8.1%) | – | – | 3 (1.9%) |
| 7. Unknown pesticides | 5 (10.2%) | 2 (5.4%) | 2 (4.3%) | – | 9 (5.8%) |
DGHP District General Hospital Polonnaruwa, RDHS Regional Director of Health Services, THA Anuradhapura Teaching Hospital
Clinical manifestations of pesticide poisoning among children in rural Sri Lanka
| Clinical manifestations | THA | PDGH | RDHS | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Gastrointestinal symptoms | 12 (32.4%) | 19 (41.3%) | 8 (34.7%) | 39 (36.8%) |
| 2. Neurological symptoms | 7 (18.9%) | 8 (17.3%) | 5 (21.7%) | 20 (18.9%) |
| 3. Respiratory symptoms | 4 (10.8%) | 4 (8.6%) | 2 (8.7%) | 10 (9.4%) |
| 4. Cardiovascular symptoms | 2 (5.4%) | 2 (4.2%) | – | 4 (3.8%) |
Reasons for delayed management of children with acute pesticide poisoning in rural Sri Lanka
| Reasons for delayed presentation | THA | THP | RDHS | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Lack of concern regarding urgency of the situation | 9 (24.3%) | 8 (17.3%) | 7 (30.4%) | 24 (22.6%) |
| 2. Lack of transport facilities in emergencies | 8 (21.6%) | 8 (17.3%) | 5 (21.7%) | 21 (19.8%) |
| 3. Lack of knowledge regarding possible complications | 6 (16.2%) | 6 (13%) | 7 (30.4%) | 19 (17.9%) |
| 4. Lack of financial resources | 6 (16.2%) | 5 (10.8%) | 3 (13%) | 14 (13.2%) |
| 5. Child had not told about the incident until symptoms occur | 2 (5.4%) | 2 (4.3%) | 1 (4.3%) | 5 (4.7%) |
| 6. Delayed attention by the medical team | 1 (2.7%) | – | – | 1 (0.9%) |
Pattern of location of poisoning, harmful first aid measures and complications of pesticide poisoning among children at THA
| Characteristic of poisoning | Variable | No. | Percentage |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1.Location of poisoning event | Cultivation area | 19 | 51.3% |
| Home garden | 7 | 18.9% | |
| Home kitchen | 6 | 16.2% | |
| 2.First aid measures | Forceful ingestion of plain water | 5 | 13.5% |
| Forceful ingestion of soap water | 3 | 8.1% | |
| Forceful ingestion of coconut milk | 2 | 5.4% | |
| 3.Complications | Cardiac arrhythmia | 2 | 5.4% |
| Aspiration pneumonia | 2 | 5.4% | |
| Seizures | 2 | 5.4% | |
| Respiratory arrest | 1 | 2.7% |