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Journal Article

Citation

Ogura K, Takahashi W, Morita Y. Acute Med. Surg. 2019; 6(3): 308-311.

Affiliation

Department of Emergency and Critical Care Medicine Chiba Aoba Municipal Hospital Chiba Japan.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, Japanese Association for Acute Medicine, Publisher John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1002/ams2.414

PMID

31304035

PMCID

PMC6603319

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Nowadays, it is getting easier to search information about helium-assisted suicide online. Therefore, healthcare professionals must understand helium-associated medical conditions. CASE PRESENTATION: A 27-year-old man was found with his head covered with a bag connected to a helium tank. Hyperbaric oxygen therapy was not given because his head computed tomography showed no cerebral vasculature air embolism and there was no obvious limb paralysis. The diagnosis was impaired consciousness with hypoxic encephalopathy; he needed mechanical ventilation for 2 days. He was discharged after intelligence tests with no obvious higher brain dysfunction.

CONCLUSION: We successfully treated a patient with hypoxic encephalopathy due to helium inhalation. Our analysis suggests that the pathophysiology and appropriate intervention of helium intoxication might be different according to the devices used.


Language: en

Keywords

Balloon inflator; cerebral embolism; helium; hypoxic encephalopathy; voice changer

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