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1.
Acta toxicol. argent ; 23(3): 125-133, dic. 2015.
Article in Spanish | LILACS | ID: biblio-908823

ABSTRACT

Se han reportado en la literatura pocos casos de intoxicación por mercurio por administración en tejidos blandos. No se cuenta con suficiente evidencia acerca del manejo con terapia quelante en este tipo de intoxicación. Se reporta el caso de una mujer de 34 años con antecedente psiquiátrico la cual se administró mercurio intramuscular en fosa cubital izquierda con fines autolíticos. Acudió al servicio de urgencias 24 horas posteriores a su administración, el motivo principal fue el dolor intenso en la zona y la presencia de edema, sin efectos sistémicos. La radiografía mostró depósitos metálicos en 1/3 de brazo, localizados en músculo, y que migraron a través de la fascia hacia 2/3 del antebrazo. La placa de tórax no mostró alteraciones. Fue intervenida quirúrgicamente en 3 ocasiones extrayendo mínimas cantidades de mercurio. La paciente fue manejada con antibióticos por presencia de celulitis. Un mes después presentó temblor mercurial, razón por la cual se tomaron muestras de sangre y orina para la determinación de mercurio, el cual resulto elevado en ambas muestras, por lo que se le administró terapia quelante con D-penicilamina.


There are just a few cases of mercury toxicity after administration in soft tissue, reported in the literature. There is insufficient evidence about the management with chelation therapy in this type of poisoning. We report the case of a 34 year-old woman with a psychiatric history who administered herself a mercury injection into de muscle in the left cubital fossa, referred as a suicide attempt. She came to the emergency department 24 hours after administration; the main reason was the intense pain in the area and the presence of edema, with no systemic effects. Radiography showed metallic deposits in 1/3 arm, located in muscle, which moved through the fascia to 2/3 of the forearm. Chest radiography was normal. She underwent surgery trhee times extracting trace amounts of mercury. The patient was managed with antibiotics by the presence of cellulite. One month later she had tremor mercuralis, so a blood and urine samples were sent to the laboratory in order to determinate mercury levels, which resulted high in both fluids, therefore chelation therapy with D-penicillamine was administered.


Subject(s)
Humans , Female , Adult , Mercury Poisoning/diagnostic imaging , Mercury Poisoning/drug therapy , Mercury/toxicity , Chelation Therapy/statistics & numerical data , Mercury Poisoning/surgery , Mercury Poisoning/urine
2.
Egyptian Journal of Hospital Medicine [The]. 2014; 57 (October): 482-493
in English | IMEMR | ID: emr-160248

ABSTRACT

Thalassemia is a genetic inherited blood disorder in which the body makes abnormal hemoglobin with excessive destruction of red blood cells, which leads to anemia. For many years, hepatitis B virus was a major problem for patients with thalassemia substantially contracted from blood transfusions. The development of effective vaccine has further reduced the magnitude of the problem of hepatitis B. Iron chelators are used to remove excess iron that accumulates due to repeated blood transfusion. To compare thalassemic patients either have or haven't HCV with healthy persons as regards biochemical indices taking in consideration effect of vaccination against HBV or not and using iron chelating therapy or not by the studied persons. A case control study in which 40 thalassemic, blood transfusion dependent patients were chosen randomly to act as a case group from thalassemic patients attending the VACSERA Company. The cases [40 patients] they were classified to patients having HCV, patients were HBV vaccinated, other non vaccinated, using iron chelating therapyor don't use it. Another 10 healthy and non thalassemic persons were chosen randomly among persons attending the same company as a control group to be matched with the case group. 50% of studied thalassemic patients had HCV seropositivity. Biochemical blood indices which were found to be significantly elevated among thalassemic patients than controls were ALT, AST, ALP, GGT and LDH enzymes in addition to serum iron, ferritin and globulin mostly in HBV non-vaccinated and iron chelating therapy non dependent patients while, other biochemical indices which were significantly decreased among thalassemic patients compared to controls included: total cholesterol, total protein, albumin and albumin/globulin ratio mostly in HBV vaccinated and iron chelating non dependent patients. This study illustrated the effectiveness of iron chelators agentsand the importance of vaccination for reduction of morbidity and mortality


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Female , Chelation Therapy/statistics & numerical data , Iron/adverse effects , Iron Metabolism Disorders , Hepatitis B virus , Vaccination/statistics & numerical data , Case-Control Studies , Comparative Study
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