scholarly journals SP2 Management of ethylene glycol poisoning in an adolescent: a clinical pearl

2020 ◽  
Vol 105 (9) ◽  
pp. e1.2-e2
Author(s):  
Nicola Wilson

Situation16 year old girl admitted with suspected ingestion of ethylene glycol. She was treated with fomepizole and continuous renal replacement therapy (CRRT).How the Pharmacy Team ContributedEthanol was prescribed until fomepizole arrived. The volume of ethanol to be administered was calculated wrongly by the consultant due to confusion about the available strength. The Paediatric Intensive Care Unit (PICU) pharmacist intervened and the correct dosage information was given.PICU pharmacist used Toxbase to determine the correct treatment of ethylene glycol poisoning and advised on dosing regime, including adjustment due to CRRT. The pharmacist facilitated prescribing on the electronic system (added drug to system, set up administration instructions and assisted with prescribing – pharmacist was not an Independent Prescriber). This allowed medical staff to concentrate on resuscitation, monitoring cardiac function, inserting intravenous lines and obtaining access for CRRT.The PICU pharmacist and pharmacy technician co-ordinated initial supply of fomepizole. Fomepizole is usually ordered directly from the manufacturer during office hours. The patient presented in the early evening so further supply had to be obtained from a hospital hundreds of miles away after referring to the Rarely Used Medicines list. Pharmacist contacted appropriate on-call pharmacist and arranged for transfer of medicines via courier. Pharmacy technician arranged for further supply form the manufacturer the following day.Pharmacy technician arranged supply of additional dialysis fluids for CRRT due to the higher than usual administration rate.Without contribution from the pharmacy team the patient is likely to have been given the wrong dose of ethanol and fomepizole, and there would have been delay in initiation of treatment followed by an interruption, as it was wrongly assumed that it was kept as stock in the adjoining ‘adult hospital’ and subsequent supply from a local hospital would not have been sought by ward staff until original supply ran out.OutcomeEthylene glycol poisoning was confirmed on laboratory testing. Levels of ethylene glycol fell steadily over 36 hours, allowing CRRT and fomepizole to stop. Patient was discharged from PICU after 48 hours with no apparent long-lasting effects, but was referred to various specialities including renal, gastroenterology and psychology.Patient and family denied knowledge of intentional or accidental ingestion. Police investigation was inconclusive.Lessons to be LearnedLarger supplies of fomepizole are now kept in stock within Health Board. Supplies were missing from emergency cupboards when stock was needed, despite being on stock lists, necessitating courier fees to transfer stock from elsewhere. Procedures reviewed to ensure that stock is available in emergency cupboards at all times.This patient demonstrated that current (target) stock levels of fomepizole were inadequate for providing treatment during CRRT as the required doses are substantially higher (administered every four hours rather than every twelve hours) and would have lasted less than 12 hours for this average sized teenager. National Rarely Used Medicines list was updated to reflect actual stock levels and other hospitals increased their stockholding due to the realisation that existing stock was inadequate and that further supplies were hard to obtain out of working hours.

2018 ◽  
Vol 290 ◽  
pp. e9-e14 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gaspar Tuero ◽  
Jesús González ◽  
Laura Sahuquillo ◽  
Anna Freixa ◽  
Isabel Gomila ◽  
...  

1978 ◽  
Vol 18 (2) ◽  
pp. 102-107 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. A. L. Bowen ◽  
P.S. B. Minty ◽  
A. Sengupta

Two cases of self poisoning by ethylene glycol are reported. The salient features of fatal acute ethylene glycol poisoning are mentioned with detailed histological and toxicological findings. Gas chromatographic analysis was used to determine ethylene glycol levels in serum and urine.


2017 ◽  
Vol 49 (4) ◽  
pp. 7
Author(s):  
Delyan Ivanov ◽  
Diana G. Ivanova

2016 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Pastorino ◽  
L. Todisco ◽  
E. Cazzulo ◽  
L. Berretta ◽  
A. Orecchia ◽  
...  

From mega-voltage portal images acquired on an electronic system (EPID), technological research has developed 3D and recently 4D volumetric verification modalities, allowing a direct visualization of the target, a direct comparison with the planning-TC and an optimization of the treatment (reduction of set-up errors, verification of the need for re-planning), leading to the very modern Image Guided RadioTherapy (IGRT). IGRT allows different technical solutions through direct or indirect visualization of the tumor and the acquisition of pre-treatment verification images, allowing to identify, quantify and correct errors related to set-up and organ-tumor motion, obtaining a greater compliance of the delivered dose, decreasing the risk of "geographic miss" and toxicity to healthy tissues and reducing the margins from CTV to PTV for the implementation of "dose escalation" protocols.


2022 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Kentaro Ukita ◽  
Kanako Otomune ◽  
Ryo Fujimoto ◽  
Kanako Hasegawa ◽  
Koichi Izumikawa ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 158-159
Author(s):  
Marc Ghannoum ◽  
Darren M. Roberts ◽  
Sophie Gosselin ◽  
Robert S. ◽  
Hoffman

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Jarrod Coburn

<p>Residents’ groups have been in existence in New Zealand for almost 150 years yet very little is known about them. The collection of residents’, ratepayers’ and progressive associations, community councils, neighbourhood committees and the like make up a part of the community governance sector that numbers over a thousand-strong. These groups are featured prominently in our news media, are active in local government affairs and expend many thousands of volunteer hours every year in their work in communities… but what exactly is that work? From the literature we see these groups can be a source of local community knowledge (Kass et al., 2009), a platform for political activity (Deegan, 2002), critical of government (Fullerton, 2005) or help maintain government transparency and accountability (Mcclymont and O'Hare, 2008). They are sometimes part of the establishment too (Wai, 2008) and are often heard promoting the interests of local people (Slater, 2004). Residents’ groups can be set up to represent the interests of a specific demographic group (Seng, 2007) or focus on protecting or promoting a sense of place (Kushner and Siegel, 2003) or physical environment (Savova, 2009). Some groups undertake charitable activities (Turkstra, 2008) or even act in a negative manner that can impact on the community (Horton, 1996). This research examines 582 New Zealand organisations to derive a set of purposes that residents’ groups perform and ascertains how their purposes differ between geo-social and political locality and over three distinct eras of community development. The thesis also examines the relationship between residents’ groups and councillors, council officers, district health board members and civil defence and seeks to uncover if the level of engagement (if any) has an affect on their overall raison d’etre. The research concludes with a typology of New Zealand residents’ groups along with the key purposes of each type.</p>


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