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Journal Article

Citation

Woolf AD, Gren JM. Am. J. Dis. Child. (1960) 1990; 144(7): 785-788.

Affiliation

Program in Clinical Pharmacology/Toxicology, Children's Hospital, Boston, MA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1990, American Medical Association)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

1972609

Abstract

The diagnosis and management of acute poisoning episodes in adolescents and young adults with anorexia nervosa are complicated by their underlying psychopathologic conditions. We investigated 23 consecutive cases of poisoning in 21 patients with anorexia nervosa reported to the Massachusetts Poison Center, Boston, during a 13-month period. All were intentional self-poisonings. Agents involved most often were psychotherapeutic drugs, cathartics, and/or analgesics. Potentially life-threatening drugs were often implicated in the poisoning. Diagnosis was complicated by purposefully deceptive information from patients and the presence of unsuspected toxins. Treatment was complicated by long delays to presentation for medical care and by underlying metabolic abnormalities. Decontamination efforts were complicated by the patients' prior use of emetics and cathartics. Seventeen patients required hospitalization; 4 patients suffered a complicated hospital course and a fifth patient died.


Language: en

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