| Literature DB >> 33787179 |
David Toma1, Tania-Emima Toma2, Cristina Bologa3,4, Cătălina Lionte3,4.
Abstract
Organophosphate pesticide (OP) poisoning is quite common and can cause cardiovascular complications and even direct myocardial injury. However, no guideline has included an acute poisoning as a potential cause for a type 2 myocardial infarction (MI) so far. Here we present a case of a 61-year-old woman brought by ambulance to emergency department one hour after accidental ingestion of an unknown quantity of a solution she used against flea infestation. The patient presented with dizziness, myosis, excessive sweating, hypersalivation, sphincteric incontinence, muscle fasciculation, tremor of the extremities, pale skin, alcoholic and pesticide breath odour. Even though we had no guidelines to fall back on, we successfully treated the patient with low-molecular-weight heparin, antiplatelets, statin, diltiazem, antidote therapy, and supportive care. Physicians should be aware that OP poisoning can induce type 2 MI as a complication within a few hours since exposure, and emergency management should always include close cardiac monitoring.Entities:
Keywords: cardiovascular events; organophosphate poisoning; toxicology
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33787179 PMCID: PMC8191432 DOI: 10.2478/aiht-2021-72-3502
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arh Hig Rada Toksikol ISSN: 0004-1254 Impact factor: 1.948
Figure 1AElectrocardiogram monitoring showing acute STEMI in inferior territory. ECG upon ED admission shows sinus rhythm, ST segment depression in V3-V4, and flat T waves in D1, aVL, V5-V6
Figure 1BElectrocardiogram monitoring showing acute STEMI in inferior territory. ECG 26 hours after admission showed important ST segment elevation in leads DII, DIII, aVF, with S-T segment depression in aVL, flat T waves in DI, and V6, and sinus tachycardia
Figure 1CElectrocardiogram monitoring showing acute STEMI in inferior territory. ECG at the Cardiology Department revealed acute ST-elevation in inferior territory and sinus tachycardia
Figure 1DElectrocardiogram monitoring showing acute STEMI in inferior territory. ECG before discharge showing persistence of ischaemic changes in the inferolateral territory
Case reports of myocardial infarction following organophosphate poisoning
| Author | Onset after OP exposure | Type of poisoning | Type of myocardial infarction | Coronary angiogram | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tkaczyk Jędrzej et al. (25) | In the same day, after admission | Voluntary | Type 1 | Three-vessel coronary disease | Dead |
| Karasu-al. (6) Minareci et | After 1–2 h | Accidental | Type 1 | 90 right % coronary stenosis of artery the | Recovered |
| Ayyadurai et al. (28) | Upon admission | Voluntary | Type 2 | Patent coronaries | Recovered |
| Kidiyoor et al. (3) | After 7 days | Voluntary | Type 2 | Left anterior descending artery 20 coronary % obstruction (autopsy) | Dead |
| Kuo et al. (26) | after Second admission night | specified Not | Inferolateral STEMI | No stenotic thrombosis artery or | Dead |
| Pankaj and Krishna (24) | After 5 days | specified Not | STEMI | Postponed | Recovered |
| Joshi et al. (23) | After 2 days | Voluntary | STEMI | Not performed | Recovered |
| Aydın (22) and Küçüktepe | At admission | Accidental | STEMI | Not specified | Recovered |
| Kumar et al. (16) | After 3 days | Voluntary | Inferolateral STEMI | Not performed | specified Not |
| Mdaghri et al. (21) | After 20 hours | specified Not | Endocardial ischaemia | Not specified | Dead |
| Lionte et al. (4) | 24 hours after admission | Voluntary | Anteroseptal STEMI | (pathology Not performed confirmed diagnosis) | Dead |