Pesticide and Insecticide Poisoning

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Organophosphate & Carbamate Poisoning - AChE Attack!

  • Mechanism: Inhibit Acetylcholinesterase (AChE) → ↑ Acetylcholine (ACh).
    • Organophosphates (OPs): Irreversible inhibition (covalent bond, "aging").
    • Carbamates: Reversible inhibition.
  • Clinical Features (Cholinergic Crisis):
    • Muscarinic: 📌 DUMBELS (Diarrhea, Urination, Miosis, Bronchospasm/Bronchorrhea, Emesis, Lacrimation, Salivation).
    • Nicotinic: Muscle weakness, fasciculations, paralysis, hypertension, tachycardia.
    • CNS: Seizures, coma, respiratory depression.
  • Diagnosis: Clinical; ↓ RBC AChE levels. Atropine challenge: 1 mg IV.
  • Management:
    • ABCs, Decontamination.
    • Atropine: 2-5 mg IV q 5-15 min until atropinization (target: clear lungs).
    • Pralidoxime (PAM): 1-2 g IV (OPs only, before aging).
    • Diazepam for seizures.
  • Complications:
    • Intermediate Syndrome (IMS): 24-96 hrs; muscle weakness.
    • OPIDP (Delayed Polyneuropathy): 2-3 weeks.

⭐ Pralidoxime is generally contraindicated or not useful in pure carbamate poisoning as it may worsen toxicity with certain carbamates (e.g., Sevin/Carbaryl).

Organochlorine Poisoning - Neurotoxic Nightmare

  • Mechanism: GABA-A antagonism → CNS hyperexcitability. Also Na⁺/K⁺-ATPase inhibition.

  • Examples: DDT, lindane, endosulfan. Lipophilic, fat storage, prolonged effects.

  • Key Features:

    • Paresthesias, tremors, ataxia.
    • Myoclonic jerks, generalized seizures (often recurrent/status epilepticus).
    • Respiratory depression.
  • Management:

    • Decontamination (skin/GI). ⚠️ Avoid oral fats/oils.
    • Seizure control: Benzodiazepines (e.g., diazepam 5-10 mg IV), phenobarbital.
    • Supportive care. ⚠️ Avoid epinephrine (↑arrhythmia risk).
  • ⭐ > Organochlorines sensitize myocardium to catecholamines, risking ventricular arrhythmias.

Aluminium Phosphide Poisoning - Phosphine Peril

  • Source: "Celphos", "Phostoxin"; releases $PH_3$ (phosphine) with moisture.
  • MOA: Inhibits cytochrome oxidase → cellular hypoxia.
  • Clinical:
    • GIT: N/V (garlicky odor), pain.
    • CVS: Refractory shock, arrhythmias, ECG changes.
    • Resp: ARDS, pulm. edema.
    • Severe metabolic acidosis.
  • Dx: Clinical; AgNO3 test (gastric/breath → black).
  • Rx: No antidote. Supportive care crucial.
    • Gastric lavage (KMnO4 1:10000, coconut oil), charcoal.
    • IV fluids, vasopressors.
    • MgSO4 (IV), NAC.
    • ECMO if refractory shock.

⭐ Profound refractory shock and severe metabolic acidosis are hallmarks. Aluminium Phosphide Poisoning: Symptoms and Mgmt

Paraquat Poisoning - Blue Death Dilemma

  • Herbicide causing multi-organ failure, primarily targeting lungs (pulmonary fibrosis).
  • Mechanism: Redox cycling → Reactive Oxygen Species (ROS) → oxidative stress.
  • Key Features: Oral burns, GI distress, renal failure, "Paraquat Lung".
  • Diagnosis: Urine dithionite test (turns blue/green).
  • Management:
    • Decontamination: Fuller's earth/activated charcoal.
    • Hemoperfusion (if early).
    • Antioxidants (N-acetylcysteine, Vit C, E).
    • ⚠️ Strict O₂ restriction unless severe hypoxemia.

Paraquat poisoning dithionite test color changes

⭐ Oxygen therapy can worsen lung injury in early paraquat poisoning by enhancing free radical formation due to increased ROS production in the lungs.

Other Pesticides - Brief Bites

  • Pyrethroids (e.g., Allethrin, Cypermethrin)
    • Na+ channel modulators → paresthesias (facial tingling), allergic reactions.
    • Tx: Symptomatic; Vitamin E for paresthesias.
  • Rodenticides
    • Superwarfarins (e.g., Brodifacoum): Inhibit Vit K epoxide reductase → severe bleeding.
      • Tx: Vitamin K1 (phytonadione), FFP/PCC.
    • Aluminium Phosphide (Celphos): Releases phosphine ($PH_3$) gas.
      • Garlic odor, severe metabolic acidosis, refractory shock, ARDS.
      • Tx: Supportive, MgSO4.

      ⭐ Aluminium phosphide poisoning has very high mortality, often due to refractory cardiogenic shock and arrhythmias.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Organophosphates (OPs) & Carbamates: Cholinergic crisis (DUMBELS). Treat with Atropine; Pralidoxime for OPs.
  • Organochlorines (DDT, Endosulfan): CNS hyperexcitability, seizures. Manage with diazepam.
  • Aluminium Phosphide (Celphos): Profound shock, metabolic acidosis. No specific antidote; magnesium sulfate may help.
  • Paraquat: Progressive pulmonary fibrosis, multi-organ damage. No specific antidote.
  • Garlic odor on breath: Suspect OP or Aluminium Phosphide.
  • Atropinization (for OPs/Carbamates): Aim for dry mouth, clear lungs, HR > 80/min.

Practice Questions: Pesticide and Insecticide Poisoning

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All are organophosphorus poisons, except.

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Flashcards: Pesticide and Insecticide Poisoning

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Lactic acidosis type _____ is seen without anaerobic state, due to drug use, drug toxicity or DM, renal failure etc.

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Lactic acidosis type _____ is seen without anaerobic state, due to drug use, drug toxicity or DM, renal failure etc.

B

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