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Journal Article

Citation

Mozafari N, Talaie H, Shoaei SD, Hashemian M, Mahdavinejad A. Iran. Red Crescent Med. J. 2016; 18(4).

Copyright

(Copyright © 2016, Iranian Red Crescent Society, Publisher Kowsar Publishing)

DOI

10.5812/ircmj.35483

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Body temperature is a critical criterion of health. Drugs and a variety of poisons can affect body temperature in poisoned patients, causing hyperthermia and hyperpyrexia.

OBJECTIVES: Our previous study's findings in patients poisoned with organophosphate led us to the goal of this study: obtaining the initial tympanic temperature in patients poisoned by a variety of toxins.

MATERIALS AND METHODS: A cross-sectional study reviewed the records of poisoned patients who were admitted to the toxicological intensive care unit (TICU) at Loghman Hakim hospital poison center (LHHPC) from February 2014 to February 2015. The data collected included gender, age, type of poisoning, the season during which poisoning occurred, vital signs, initial tympanic temperature (first four hours), presence of seizures, white blood cell (WBC) count, creatinine phosphokinase (CPK), length of stay and patient outcome. We determined the mean (SD) for normally distributed continuous variables, the median and interquartile range for non-normally distributed continuous variables, and the absolute and relative frequency (%) for categorical variables. All were determined using SPSS version 16.

RESULTS: Data were collected from 310 eligible patients. The mean patient age was 32.65 (with a standard deviation of 14.40). Of the patients in the study, 183 (59%) were male. Intentional poisoning in an attempted suicide was documented in 253 (81.6%) patients. The most prevalent poisoning agent was aluminum phosphate (18.70%), followed by methadone (10%) and opium (10%). Seventy percent of the patients (n = 217) were diagnosed with fever or hyperthermia. A temperature ≥ 40°C was detected in just three cases. The highest mean temperature was found in patients poisoned with amphetamine, organophosphate or tramadol. Patients with alcohol and phenobarbital poisoning were included in the sample, but these patients were not diagnosed with hypothermia. WBC ≥ 10,000 cells/mL and CPK ≥ 975 IU/L were recorded in 57.7% and 13.2% of subjects, respectively.

CONCLUSIONS: Body temperature changes in human poisonings are a matter in need of special attention. A literature review did not reveal any controversy over hypothermia, but poisoning cases exhibit a variety of patterns of fever and hyperthermia. If there are no limits to the diagnosis of fever and hyperthermia, all cases with a poor prognosis which fail to respond to treatment could be categorized as drug-induced hyperthermia. Therefore, a different approach is needed for poisoning cases. © 2016, Iranian Red Crescent Medical Journal.


Language: en

Keywords

adolescent; adult; human; organophosphate; child; female; male; Hypothermia; Poisoning; Review; alcohol; hypothermia; aged; amphetamine; major clinical study; seasonal variation; retrospective study; length of stay; tricyclic antidepressant agent; carbon monoxide intoxication; opiate; paracetamol; seizure; tramadol; cross-sectional study; carbamazepine; benzodiazepine; methadone; fever; phenobarbital; phenytoin; creatinine; leukocyte count; hyperthermia; hemoglobin; intubation; outcome assessment; vital sign; creatine kinase blood level; organophosphate poisoning; aluminum phosphate; Hyperthermia; tympanic temperature; tympanic thermometer

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