ABSTRACT
The herbicide, pendimethalin, is used worldwide, but its acute toxicity is not yet widely known. There have been some reported acute pendimethalin poisoning cases in humans and most of them intentionally ingested the concentrated formulation. We describe a 73-year-old man who developed corrosive gastroduodenal injury after accidental ingestion of the diluted (300 times with water) pendimethalin formulation. He had a history of reflux oesophagitis and had been taking omeprazol (10 mg/day) for a year. He consumed alcohol two hours after the accidental ingestion and then had nausea and epigastric pain. Endoscopy performed three days post-exposure revealed gastroduodenal injury. As he had consumed alcohol every day for years and had no history of gastroduodenal ulcer, the accidental ingestion may be associated with this injury. He was successfully treated by increasing his dosage of omeprazol (20 mg/day) for two weeks. This case indicates that ingestion of a small quantity of pendimethalin can provoke gastroduodenal injury.
Subject(s)
Accidents, Home , Aniline Compounds/toxicity , Anti-Ulcer Agents/therapeutic use , Duodenal Diseases/chemically induced , Herbicides/toxicity , Omeprazole/therapeutic use , Proton Pump Inhibitors/therapeutic use , Stomach Diseases/chemically induced , Acute Disease , Aged , Duodenal Diseases/drug therapy , Humans , Male , Stomach Diseases/drug therapy , TaiwanABSTRACT
We study the phase diagram of composite fermions (CFs) in the presence of spin and pseudospin degrees of freedom in the bilayer nu=2/3 quantum Hall (QH) state. Activation studies elucidate the existence of three different QH states with two different types of hysteresis in the magnetotransport. While a noninteracting CF model provides a qualitative account of the phase diagram, the observed renormalization of tunneling gap and a non-QH state at high densities are not explained in the noninteracting CF model, and are suggested to be manifestations of interactions between CFs.