| Literature DB >> 30483606 |
Hui Yan1, Lin Zhu1, Xianyi Zhuo1, Min Shen1, Ping Xiang1.
Abstract
The study was designed to analyze the incidence and pattern of anticoagulant rodenticide intoxication in east China and to discuss strategies of diagnosis based on laboratory analysis experience. A total of 117 patients with anticoagulant rodenticide poisoning confirmed by toxicological analysis in east China were included in this study from 2011 to 2013. The mean concentration of anticoagulant rodenticide, age, and gender of these patients, as well as the mode and type of poisoning, were discussed. The age ranged from less than 1 to 80 years with the feeble preponderance of males (M = 53.0%, F = 47.0%). The 0-9 age group covered the largest ratio of these anticoagulant rodenticide poisoning patients. Accidental or voluntary ingestion seems to be the most common cause of intoxication, with still the poisoning cause being unknown for a large number of positive analyses. Bromadiolone was the most commonly observed anticoagulant rodenticide found in the biological samples, followed by brodifacoum. The concentrations of bromadiolone and brodifacoum that were detected in the first collected whole blood from each patient ranged from 1 to 878 ng/mL (mean 97.9 ng/mL) and from 0.5 to 1566 ng/mL (mean 225.1 ng/mL), respectively. The data analysis shows a high incidence of anticoagulant rodenticide poisoning without awareness of the poisoned subjects, clearly emphasizing the need for toxicological analysis in patients with vitamin K-dependent coagulation disorder and restriction on availability of anticoagulant rodenticide.Entities:
Keywords: Forensic science; anticoagulant rodenticides; brodifacoum; bromadiolone; forensic toxicology; intoxication; poisoning
Year: 2016 PMID: 30483606 PMCID: PMC6197128 DOI: 10.1080/20961790.2016.1242042
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Forensic Sci Res ISSN: 2471-1411
Anticoagulant rodenticide intoxication cases confirmed by LC-MS analysis between 2011 and 2013.
| Causes [ | Positive cases [ | ||||||
| Year | Total ( | Suicide | Homicide | Accident | Unknown | Male | Female |
| 2011 | 29 | 8 (27.6) | 0 (0.0) | 5 (17.2) | 16 (55.2) | 15 (51.7) | 14 (48.3) |
| 2012 | 35 | 7 (20.0) | 1 (2.9) | 3 (8.6) | 24 (68.6) | 21 (60.0) | 14 (40.0) |
| 2013 | 53 | 8 (15.1) | 0 (0.0) | 6 (11.3) | 39 (73.6) | 26 (49.1) | 27 (50.9) |
| Total | 117 | 23 (19.7) | 1 (0.8) | 14 (12.0) | 79 (67.5) | 62 (53.0) | 55 (47.0) |
Figure 1.Age distribution of anticoagulant rodenticide poisoning (N=117).
Figure 2.Incidence of pesticide poisoning.
Information of ten patients with bromadiolone poisoning.
| No. | Age (year) | Gender | Peak concentration (ng/mL) | Elimination time (month) | Clinical symptoms |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 57 | M | 770 | 25 | Gingival bleeding and systemic purple skin |
| 2 | 28 | M | 18.1 | 12 | Hematuria and flank pain |
| 3 | 4 | F | 83 | 4 | Systemic ecchymoses |
| 4 | 2 | F | 0.5 | 1 | Repetitive mucocutaneous bleeding and gingival bleeding |
| 5 | 78 | F | 27 | 2 | Hematuria and sudden syncope after melaena |
| 6 | 43 | F | 5.3 | 2 | Gingival bleeding |
| 7 | 67 | M | 5.5 | 7 | Repetitive ecchymoses and gingival bleeding |
| 8 | 60 | M | 168 | 18 | Repetitive gingival bleeding and hematuria |
| 9 | 6 | M | 16 | 9 | Systemic scattered petechiae, ecchymoses |
| 10 | 2 | M | 37 | 8 | Gingival bleeding |