K. Jagadishkumar, S. Ramesh, Mohammed Roshan, C. KrishnakumarH
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Introduction: Clonidine is among the drugs that are in a list of ‘one pill can kill’ drugs. We are reporting a child with clonidine toxicity with classical manifestations who recovered completely. Case Report: A 3 year and 2 months old ADHD girl presented with drowsiness for 30 minutes. Her mother gave the history of accidental consumption of 3/4th clonidine 100 mcg tablet 45 minutes prior. On the examination, the child was drowsy with Glasgow Coma Score (GCS) 12/15. Her heart rate was 82 /minute with low volume pulse, respiratory rate 22 /minute, systolic blood pressure was 80 mm of Hg, and diastolic BP was not recordable. Immediately normal saline bolus was administered and her pulse volume improved and BP was 94/60 mm of Hg. After an hour, GCS was 9/15 and the respiration was shallow. After 4 hours, her sensorium improved (GCS 15/15). By 6 hours of ingestion, the child showed complete recovery. Discussion: Most of the clonidine poisoning children were younger than 6 years according to the NSWPIC database. Among them, 60% developed symptoms, most commonly lethargy (80%), bradycardia (17%), hypotension (15%), and respiratory depression (5%). Symptoms usually develop within 30-60 minutes and resolve within 24-48 hours. In our case, classical symptoms like drowsiness, hypotension, meiosis occurred within 30 minutes of ingestion and her consciousness deteriorated along with shallow respiration by the next 2 hours. By 6 hours of ingestion, the child showed complete recovery. Conclusion: While prescribing clonidine caution should be exercised regarding the side-effects. When calculating the dose, extra vigilance should be ensured and drug needs to be kept out of the reach of children.
期刊介绍:
Asia Pacific Journal of Medical Toxicology (APJMT) aims to expand the knowledge of medical toxicology and tries to provide reliable information in this field for medical and healthcare professionals. APJMT mainly focuses on research related to medical toxicology issues in the Asia Pacific region and publishes articles on clinical and epidemiological aspects of toxicology, poisonings emergency care, addiction, drug interactions and adverse effects. The journal accepts and welcomes high quality papers in the form of original articles and rarely review articles, case reports and scientific letters relevant to medical practice in toxicology.