| Literature DB >> 34128439 |
John Tat1, Karen Heskett2, Shiho Satomi1, Renate B Pilz1, Beatrice A Golomb1, Gerry R Boss1.
Abstract
CONTEXT: Sodium azide is a highly toxic chemical. Its production has increased dramatically over the last 30 years due to its widespread use in vehicular airbags, and it is available for purchase online. Thus, accidental exposure to azide or use as a homicidal or suicidal agent could be on the rise, and secondary exposure to medical personnel can occur. No antidote exists for azide poisoning. We conducted a systematic review of azide poisoning to assess recent poisoning reports, exposure scenarios, clinical presentations, and treatment strategies.Entities:
Keywords: Sodium azide (NaN3); hydrazoic acid (HN3); poisoning; review; treatment
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34128439 PMCID: PMC8349855 DOI: 10.1080/15563650.2021.1906888
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Toxicol (Phila) ISSN: 1556-3650 Impact factor: 4.467
Figure 1.Peer-reviewed articles concerning human cases of NaN3 or HN3 exposure.
Figure 2.News articles concerning human cases of NaN3 or HN3 exposure.
Review of 37 peer-reviewed papers yielded 106 cases.
| 1A-1. Accidental exposure due to airbag deployment | |||||||||
| Publication | Level of evidence | Number of cases | Gender | Age | Exposure route | Clinical features | Hospitalization | Treatment | Survival |
| Corazza et al. [ | VII | 1 | Male | 35 | Dermal contact | First-degree burns Irritant contact dermatitis | Yes | Topical steroids | Yes |
| Foley and Helm [ | VII | 1 | Female | 32 | Dermal contact | First-degree burns | Yes | Topical antibiotics | Yes |
| Corazza et al. [ | VII | 1 | Male | 36 | Dermal contact | First and second-degree burns | Yes | Topical antibiotics | Yes |
| Wu et al. [ | VII | 1 | Female | 29 | Dermal contact | Irritant contact dermatitis | Yes | Topical and oral steroids | Yes |
| Suhr and Kreusch [ | VII | 1 | Female | 73 | Dermal contact | Second-degree burns | Yes | Topical antibiotics | Yes |
| Hambrook and Fink [ | VII | 1 | Male | 47 | Inhalation | Asthma Chest tightness Cough | Yes | p-agonists Inhaled steroids | Yes |
| Caudle et al. [ | VII | 1 | Male | 18 | Inhalation | Chemical pneumonitis Dyspnea Hemoptysis | Yes | Oral steroids Oxygen | Yes |
| Belhadj-Tahar et al. [ | VII | 1 | Male | 37 | Inhalation and dermal contact | Burning eyes Dyspnea | Yes | Ocular irrigation Supplemental oxygen | Yes |
| Francis et al. [ | VII | 1 | Male | 22 | Inhalation and dermal contact | Alkaline ocular injury Erythematous supraglottis Stridor Tachypnea | Yes | Mechanical ventilation Ocular irrigation Steroids | Yes |
| Govindarajan et al. [ | VII | 1 | Male | 56 | Inhalation | Chemical pneumonitis | Yes | N/A | Yes |
| Sever et al. [ | VII | 3 | Female | 21 | Dermal contact | All three had second-degree burns One patient had alkaline ocular injury | Yes | Standard burn care Victim with ocular burn received additional ophthalmic care | Yes |
| 1A-2. Accidental exposure due to industrial work | |||||||||
| Publication | Level of evidence | Number of cases | Gender | Age | Exposure route | Clinical features | Hospitalization | Treatment | Survival |
| Pham et al. [ | VII | 1 | Male | 29 | Inhalation and dermal contact | Bradycardia Hypotension Metabolic acidosis Third-degree burns | Yes | Intravenous fluids Mechanical ventilation Sodium bicarbonate Vasopressors | No |
| Miljours and Braun [ | IV | 41 | Unknown | Median age not available | Inhalation | Burning eyes Dizziness Headache Palpitations | No | Unknown | Yes |
| Fang et al. [ | VII | 1 | Male | 32 | Inhalation and dermal contact | Diplopia | Yes | Hyperbaric oxygen
Steroids | Yes |
| 1A-3. Accidental exposure in a laboratory | |||||||||
| Publication | Level of evidence | Number of cases | Gender | Age | Exposure route | Clinical features | Hospitalization | Treatment | Survival |
| Angelotti et al. [ | VII | 1 | Male | 33 | Dermal contact (13 g) | Burns | Yes | Amputation Mechanical ventilation Vasopressors Wound care | Yes |
| 1A-4. Accidental exposure in a medical facility | |||||||||
| Publication | Level of evidence | Number of cases | Gender | Age | Exposure route | Clinical features | Hospitalization | Treatment | Survival |
| Watanabe et al. [ | VII | 1 | Female | 53 | Ingestion (1 g) | Generalized seizures Hypotension Metabolic acidosis | Yes | Hemodialysis Gastric lavage with activated charcoal Intra-aortic balloon pump Intravenous steroids Mechanical ventilation Vasopressors | Yes |
| Dermican et al. [ | VII | 1 | Female | 25 | Ingestion (0.1 g) | Generalized seizures | Yes | Gastric lavage | Yes |
| 1B-1. Suicide in a laboratory setting | |||||||||
| Publication | Level of evidence | Number of cases | Gender | Age | Exposure route | Clinical features | Hospitalization | Treatment | Survival |
| Spadafora et al. [ | VII | 1 | Female | Unknown | Ingestion (>10 g) | Bradycardia | Yes | Unknown | No |
| Senda et al. [ | VII | 1 | Female | 25 | Ingestion | Acute respiratory distress syndrome Arrythmia Cardiac arrest Coma | Yes | Gastric lavage Intravenous steroids Mechanical ventilation Sodium bicarbonate | No |
| Fuyuno and Cyranoski [ | VII | 1 | Male | 42 | Ingestion | N/A | No (found dead) | N/A | No |
| Łopaciński et al. [ | VII | 2 | Male | 30 | Ingestion (>0.18g) | Dizziness | Yes | Inhaled amyl nitrite Intravenous sodium nitrite Intravenous sodium | Yes |
| 23 | Ingestion (10 g) | Arrythmia Cardiac arrest Coma | Yes | thiosulfate | No | ||||
| Meatherall and Palatnick [ | VII | 1 | Male | 59 | Ingestion | Arrythmia Cardiogenic shock Coma | Yes | Exchange transfusion Inhaled amyl nitrite Intravenous sodium nitrite Intravenous sodium thiosulfate Mechanical ventilation Sodium bicarbonate Vasopressors | No |
| French et al. [ | VII | 1 | Male | 28 | Ingestion (0.1 g) | Bradycardia Hypotension Metabolic acidosis | Yes | Intravenous fluids Gastric lavage Sodium bicarbonate | Yes |
| Kostek et al. [ | VII | 1 | Female | 55 | Ingestion (0.6 g) | Metabolic acidosis | Yes | Gastric lavage | Yes |
| Le Blanc-Louvry et al. [ | VII | 1 | Male | 35 | Ingestion (6g) | N/A | No (found dead) | N/A | No |
| Bartecka-Mino et al. [ | VII | 1 | Female | 25 | Ingestion | Coma | Yes | Hydroxocobalamin | Yes |
| Downes et al. [ | VII | 1 | Male | 32 | Ingestion | Hypotension Metabolic acidosis | Yes | Intravenous fluids Vasopressors | No |
| Gao et al. [ | VII | 1 | Male | 23 | Ingestion (1.38 g) | Chest pain Hypotension Metabolic acidosis Nausea and vomiting | Yes | Hemodialysis Intravenous crystalloid Norepinephrine | Yes |
| Muvalia et al. [ | VII | 1 | Female | 19 | Ingestion (50 g) | Coma | Yes | Mechanical ventilation Vasopressors | No |
| 1B-2. Suicide in a non-laboratory setting | |||||||||
| Publication | Level of evidence | Number of cases | Gender | Age | Exposure route | Clinical features | Hospitalization | Treatment | Survival |
| Wiergowski et al. [ | VII | 1 | Male | 19 | Ingestion (~20 g) | N/A | No (found dead) | N/A | No |
| Meatherall and Oleschuk [ | VII | 1 | Male | 35 | Ingestion | N/A | No (found dead) | N/A | No |
| Overtchouk et al. [ | VII | 1 | Female | 69 | Ingestion (15g) | Myocardial dysfunction Metabolic acidosis | Yes | Gastric lavage Intravenous fluids | Yes |
| Rojek et al. [ | VII | 1 | Female | 50 | Ingestion | Bradycardia | Yes | Mechanical ventilation Vasopressors | No |
| Ciesla et al. [ | VII | 1 | Male | 24 | Ingestion | Coma | Yes | Unknown | No |
| Leonard et al. [ | VII | 1 | Male | 22 | Ingestion (40 g) | Arrhythmia Cardiac arrest Hypotension Metabolic acidosis | Yes | Mechanical ventilation | No |
| 1C. Secondary exposure of emergency medical personnel | |||||||||
| Publication | Level of evidence | Number of cases | Gender | Age | Exposure route | Clinical features | Hospitalization | Treatment | Survival |
| Hirose et al. [ | VII | 6 | Unknown | Unknown | Inhalation | Burning eyes Dizziness Dyspnea Headache | No | Unknown | Yes |
| Downes et al. [ | VII | 10 | 5 Males | 39 (median) | Inhalation and dermal contact | 1 case reported fatigue 1 case reported stress | No | Time off from work for the two cases | Yes |
| 1D. Unknown exposure | |||||||||
| Publication | Level of evidence | Number of cases | Gender | Age | Exposure route | Clinical features | Hospitalization | Treatment | Survival |
| Hirose et al. [ | VII | 7 | 1 Female | 22 | Ingestion | Dizziness | Yes | Gastric lavage Inhaled amyl nitrite Intravenous sodium nitrite Intravenous sodium thiosulfate Vasopressors | Yes |
| Schwarz et al. [ | VII | 5 | 3 Females | Median age not available | Ingestion | Arrhythmia | Yes | Intravenous fluids Oral antiemetics | Yes |
They are grouped based on mode of azide exposure (i.e., accidental, suicidal, secondary, and unknown, letters A through D, respectively) and sub-grouped based on exposure setting (numbers 1 through 4). Unless indicated, an entry is a primary patient.
Downes et al. [58] reported a total of 11 patients. The primary victim committed suicide by azide ingestion and is described in Table 1(B-1). Ten medical personnel who treated the patient are described in Table 1(C).
Although not in the abstract, we contacted the corresponding author who confirmed the patient ingested azide to commit suicide.
Ten patients were exposed to azide and hospitalized. Hirose worked at the hospital where seven of the patients were treated. Hence, the paper provided data on only those seven victims; they are summarized in Table 1(D) (information was not provided on whether poisoning was intentional or accidental). Six medical personnel who treated the seven azide-poisoned patients presented symptoms consistent with low-dose azide exposure, likely via inhaling HN3 gas released when performing gastric lavage on the patients. They are described in Table 1(C).
Review of 17 news articles yielded 50 cases.
| 2A-1. Accidental exposure due to industrial work | |||||||
| Publication | Number of cases | Gender | Age | Exposure route | Clinical features | Hospitalization | Survival |
| Perkins [ | 1 | Male | 45 | Dermal contact | Burned >15% of body | Yes | No |
| 2A-2. Accidental exposure in a laboratory | |||||||
| Publication | Number of cases | Gender | Age | Exposure route | Clinical features | Hospitalization | Survival |
| Green [ | 1 | Male | Unknown | Dermal Contact (65 g) | Burns | Yes | Yes |
| Author unknown [ | 1 | Male | Unknown | Ingestion | Unknown | Yes | Yes |
| Lillington [ | 11 | Unknown | Unknown | Inhalation | Unknown | Yes | Yes |
| Crabbe [ | 1 | Male | 27 | Dermal contact | Facial burns Glass embedded in chest and abdomen Minor lacerations | Yes | Yes |
| Kemsley [ | 1 | Male | Unknown | Dermal contact (200 g) | Second-degree burns Minor lacerations | Yes | Yes |
| Author unknown [ | 1 | Male | Unknown | Dermal contact | Minor lacerations | Yes | Yes |
| 2A-3. Accidental exposure in a medical facility | |||||||
| Publication | Number of cases | Gender | Age | Exposure route | Clinical features | Hospitalization | Survival |
| Author unknown [ | 1 | Male | 66 | Ingestion (1 –5 g) | Rapid deterioration Vomiting | Yes | No |
| 2B. Suicide in a non-laboratory setting | |||||||
| Publication | Number of cases | Gender | Age | Exposure route | Clinical features | Hospitalization | Survival |
| DeMare [ | 1 | Female | 32 | Ingestion | Unknown | No (found dead) | No |
| Stout [ | 1 | Female | 25 | Ingestion | Unknown | Yes | No |
| Bender [ | 1 | Female | 71 | Ingestion | N/A | No (found dead) | No |
| Singh [ | 1 | Male | 21 | Ingestion | Unknown | Yes | No |
| Hicks [ | 1 | Male | 27 | Unknown | N/A | No (found dead) | No |
| 2C. Homicide | |||||||
| Publication | Number of cases | Gender | Age | Exposure route | Clinical features | Hospitalization | Survival |
| Author unknown [ | 3 | Unknown | Unknown | Ingestion | Unknown | 1 Yes | Yes |
| State of Arizona, Appellee, v. Wendi Elizabeth Adriano, Appellant [ | 1 | Male | 33 | Ingestion (possibly 21 g) | N/A | No (found dead) | No |
| 2D. Secondary occupational exposure of medical personnel | |||||||
| Publication | Number of cases | Gender | Age | Exposure route | Clinical features | Hospitalization | Survival |
| DeMare [ | 5 | Unknown | Unknown | Unknown | Minor respiratory symptoms | Yes | Yes |
| Crabbe [ | 1 | Male | 25 | Dermal contact | Facial and corneal burns | Yes | Yes |
| Stout [ | 6 | Unknown | Unknown | Unknown | Unknown | Yes | Yes |
| Hicks [ | 1 | Unknown | Unknown | Unknown | Unknown | Yes | Yes |
| 2E. Unknown exposure | |||||||
| Publication | Number of cases | Gender | Age | Exposure route | Clinical features | Hospitalization | Survival |
| Author unknown [ | 6 | 1 Male | Unknown | Ingestion | Dizziness | Yes | Yes |
| Author unknown [ | 4 | Unknown | Unknown | Ingestion | Dizziness | Yes | Yes |
They are grouped based on mode of azide exposure (i.e., accidental, suicidal, homicidal, secondary, and unknown, letters A through E, respectively) and sub-grouped based on exposure setting (numbers 1 through 3). Unless indicated, an entry is a primary patient.
Crabbe [42] reported two patients. The primary victim was exposed to azide in a laboratory explosion and is described Table 2(A-2). A firefighter was exposed to azide while responding to the primary victim and is described in Table 2(D).
DeMare [67] reported six patients. The primary victim committed suicide by ingesting azide and is described Table 2(B). Five emergency response personnel who came into contact with the primary victim are described in Table 2(D).
Stout [68] reported seven patients. The primary victim committed suicide by ingesting azide and is described Table 2(B). Six emergency response personnel who came into contact with the primary victim are described in Table 2(D).
Hicks [70] reported two patients. The primary victim committed suicide with azide via an unknown route and is described Table 2(B). Among personnel who responded to the victim, one officer was hospitalized for observation and is described in Table 2(D).