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1.
Journal of the Korean Society of Emergency Medicine ; : 367-370, 2016.
Article in English | WPRIM | ID: wpr-219095

ABSTRACT

Poisoning may result from self-injection. Previous reports have described acute cholinergic crisis, intermediate syndrome, and delayed toxicity resulting from parenteral organophosphate administration. These complications have been managed with antidotal and conservative treatment. Acute kidney injury was not listed among the complications. We report a case of acute kidney injury after intravenous injection with an unknown liquid. After chemical composition analysis, organophosphate dichlorvos has been identified as the injected liquid substance. A 50-year-old man injected this into his left arm. He visited the emergency department with a mental change accompanied by seizure. During admission, there were no typical cholinergic symptoms or intermediate syndrome; however, there was a development of acute oliguric kidney injury. The patient was treated successfully with a combination of hemodialysis, hemoperfusion, and conservative management. The manifested seizure, altered mental state, and acute kidney injury could have been caused by several types of poisoning. Based on patient history, which was obtained during the early treatment period, there was no information of what the injected material may have been, and there were no signs of a typical organophosphate toxidrome. However, the patient was successfully treated with rapid initiation of renal replacement treatment, without the use of antidotes. Poisoning by unknown causative substances poses a diagnostic challenge to emergency physicians. In many cases, treatment may be delayed while the physician tries to identify the toxin. However, the basic toxicology principle of focusing on the patient treatment rather than the poisonous substance should not be forgotten.


Subject(s)
Humans , Middle Aged , Acute Kidney Injury , Antidotes , Arm , Dichlorvos , Emergencies , Emergency Service, Hospital , Hemoperfusion , Injections, Intravenous , Kidney , Organophosphates , Poisoning , Renal Dialysis , Seizures , Toxicology
2.
Korean Journal of Urology ; : 251-252, 1975.
Article in Korean | WPRIM | ID: wpr-41085

ABSTRACT

Most foreign bodies found in the bladder are inserted through the urethra. Abnormal psyche senility, inebriation, and eroticism are the most frequent causes for such induction. The following is a report of a male who slipped Nylon silk into the urethra during masturbation and lost it in the bladder while attempting to remove it.


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Erotica , Foreign Bodies , Masturbation , Nylons , Silk , Urethra , Urinary Bladder
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