| Literature DB >> 31890428 |
Anum Amir1, Farhan Haleem2, Ghulam Mahesar3, Rukhsana Abdul Sattar3, Talha Qureshi3, Jabbar Ghufran Syed4, M Ali Khan2.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Any substance if taken in enough quantity can be defined as a poison provided it causes physiological or anatomical harm. It can range from food products to therapeutic medications to toxins and chemicals. Animals, plants, and insects also produce toxins, which are poisonous. While any route of ingestion is dangerous, most poisons are either taken by mouth or inhaled. Rarely intravenous access as in the case of heroin/opoids overdose is seen as well. Poisoning whether deliberate or otherwise is a growing problem of the modern world. Young people are disproportionally affected by it. Mostly household products such as insecticides, bleach, acid, etc. are used. Harmful ingestion of prescription meds, recreational drugs, psychiatric medicines, and opoids has been on the rise in recent times. This is one of the major sources of poisoning these days. Data with respect to Sindh and Pakistan is scarce. As the largest referral center in the country, Jinnah Postgraduate Medical Centre sees its fair share of poisoning cases. Here we evaluate the trends and increasing burden of poisoning cases seen at this center. AIMS: To evaluate the epidemiological, poisoning characteristics and treatment outcomes of patients admitted to the National Poisoning Control Centre (NPCC) at Karachi, Pakistan.Entities:
Keywords: epidemiology; karachi; organophosphate poisoning; outcome; pakistan; poisoning
Year: 2019 PMID: 31890428 PMCID: PMC6929263 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.6229
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Demographics and epidemiological characteristics.
| N=2546 | |
| Gender | |
| Male | 1311 (51.45%) |
| Female | 1235 (48.55%) |
| Location | |
| Karachi | 2357 (92.61%) |
| Sindh | 151 (5.89%) |
| Baluchistan | 33 (1.33%) |
| Punjab | 5 (0.15%) |
| Age groups | |
| ≤12 years | 20 (0.78%) |
| 13-19 years | 755 (29.69%) |
| 20-40 years | 1527 (59.93%) |
| 41-59 years | 156 (6.12%) |
| 60≥ years | 94 (3.69%) |
| Overall age (mean) | 26.57±11.82 years |
Different types of poisoning analyzed during the study.
| N=2546 | |
| Organophosphates | 1174 (46.11%) |
| Off-label products | 458 (17.98%) |
| Rat killer | 282 (11.07%) |
| Insecticides | 194 (7.61%) |
| Typhoon | 190 (7.46%) |
| Phenyle | 50 (1.96%) |
| Snake bite(s) | 231 (9.07%) |
| Over the counter pills | 225 (8.80%) |
| Bleach ingestion | 194 (7.61%) |
| Sleeping pills | 86 (3.37%) |
| Heroin/opoids overdose | 58 (2.27%) |
| Insect bite(s) | 53 (2.07%) |
| Kerosene/Diesel ingestion | 46 (1.86%) |
| Acid ingestion | 32 (1.25%) |
| Scorpion sting | 21 (0.82%) |
| Alcohol | 12 (0.47%) |
| Methanol | 10 (0.39%) |
| Ethanol | 2 (0.07%) |
| Blackstone | 12 (0.47%) |
| Copper sulfate | 9 (0.35%) |
| Indeterminate poisoning | 393 (15.43%) |
Overall mortality, discharge frequency, and length of stay at the hospital.
| N=2546 | Length of stay (mean in days) | |
| Discharged | 2331 (91.51%) | 1.87±1.59 |
| Expired | 92 (3.61%) | 2.48±3.40 |
| Left against medical advise | 123 (4.88%) | 1.46±0.95 |
Absolute and relative mortality rates for specific poisons.
| Mortality N (%) | Relative mortality within the poisoning type group (%) | |
| Organophosphates (all) | 70 (2.7%) | 5.96% |
| Off-label products | 38 (1.49%) | 8.29% |
| Typhoon | 16 (0.62%) | 8.42% |
| Rat killer | 11 (0.43%) | 3.90% |
| Insecticide | 5 (0.19%) | 2.57% |
| Blackstone (paraphenylene-diamine) | 8 (0.31%) | 66.66% |
| Methanol overdose | 5 (0.19%) | 41.66% |
| Snake bite | 3 (0.11%) | 1.29% |
| Acid ingestion | 2 (0.07%) | 6.25% |
| Kerosene ingestion | 2 (0.07%) | 4.34% |
| Heroin overdose | 2 (0.07%) | 3.44% |
| Overall | 92 (3.61%) | |