Poisoning is injury or death due to swallowing, inhaling, touching or injecting various drugs, chemicals, venoms or gases. Many substances — such as drugs and carbon monoxide — are poisonous only in higher concentrations or dosages. Certain types of cleaners are only harmful if ingested, while others also emit toxic gases/fumes. Children are particularly sensitive to even small amounts of certain drugs and chemicals.
How you treat someone who may have been poisoned depends on:
The person’s symptoms
The person’s age
Whether you know the type and amount of the substance that caused poisoning
There are two ways to get help from Poison Control in the U.S: online at www.poison.org or by calling 800-222-1222. Both options are free, confidential, and available 24 hours a day. It may help to place a refrigerator magnet or a visible sticker in your home with the poison control number. Poison control centers are excellent resources for poisoning information and, in many situations, may advise that in-home observation is all that’s needed.
When to suspect poisoning
Poisoning signs and symptoms can mimic other conditions, such as seizure, alcohol intoxication, stroke and insulin reaction. Signs and symptoms of poisoning may include:
Burns or redness around the mouth and lips
Breath that smells like chemicals, such as gasoline or paint thinner
Vomiting
Difficulty breathing
Drowsiness
Confusion or other altered mental status
If you suspect poisoning, be alert for clues such as empty pill bottles or packages, scattered pills, and burns, stains and odors on the person or nearby objects. With a child, consider the possibility that he or she may have applied medicated patches, taken prescription medications or swallowed a button battery.
When to call for help
Call 911 or your local emergency number immediately if the person is:
Drowsy or unconscious
Having difficulty breathing or has stopped breathing
Uncontrollably restless or agitated
Having seizures
Known to have taken medications, or any other substance, intentionally or accidentally overdosed (in these situations the poisoning typically involves larger amounts, often along with alcohol)
Call Poison Help at 800-222-1222 in the United States or your regional poison control center in the following situations:
The person is stable and has no symptoms
The person is going to be transported to the local emergency department
Be ready to describe the person’s symptoms, age, weight, other medications he or she is taking, and any information you have about the poison. Try to determine the amount ingested and how long since the person was exposed to it. If possible, have on hand the pill bottle, medication package or other suspect container so that you can refer to its label when speaking with the poison control center.
What to do while waiting for help
Take the following actions until help arrives:
Swallowed poison. Remove anything remaining in the person’s mouth. If the suspected poison is a household cleaner or other chemical, read the container’s label and follow instructions for accidental poisoning.
Poison on the skin. Remove any contaminated clothing using gloves. Rinse the skin for 15 to 20 minutes in a shower or with a hose.
Poison in the eye. Gently flush the eye with cool or lukewarm water for 20 minutes or until help arrives.
Inhaled poison. Get the person into fresh air as soon as possible.
If the person vomits, turn his or her head to the side to prevent choking.
Begin CPR if the person shows no signs of life, such as moving, breathing or coughing.
Call Poison Help at 800-222-1222 in the United States or your regional poison control for additional instructions.
Have somebody gather pill bottles, packages or containers with labels, and any other information about the poison to send along with the ambulance team.
In the case of an opioid overdose
If the person is at risk of overdose of opioid pain medication and naloxone (Narcan) is available, please administer. Increasingly, health care providers are giving people Narcan injectable prescriptions if they are at risk of overdose. Loved ones should be familiar with how to use them.
Caution
Syrup of ipecac. Don’t give syrup of ipecac or do anything to induce vomiting. Expert groups, including the American Association of Poison Control Centers and the American Academy of Pediatrics, no longer endorse using ipecac in children or adults who have taken pills or other potentially poisonous substances. No good evidence proves its effectiveness, and it often can do more harm than good.
If you still have old bottles of syrup of ipecac in your home, throw them away.
Button batteries. The small, flat batteries used in watches and other electronics — particularly the larger, nickel-sized ones — are especially dangerous to small children. A battery stuck in the esophagus can cause severe tissue burns.
If you suspect that a child has swallowed one of these batteries, immediately take him or her for an emergency X-ray to determine its location. If the battery is in the esophagus, it will have to be removed. If it has passed into the stomach, it’s usually safe to allow it to pass on through the intestinal tract.
Medicated patches. If you think a child got hold of medicated patches — adhesive products for transdermal drug delivery — carefully inspect the child’s skin and remove any that are attached. Also check the roof of the mouth, where medicated patches can get stuck if the child sucks on them.
From Mayo Clinic to your inbox
Sign up for free and stay up to date on research advancements, health tips, current health topics, and expertise on managing health. Click here for an email preview.
To provide you with the most relevant and helpful information, and understand which
information is beneficial, we may combine your email and website usage information with
other information we have about you. If you are a Mayo Clinic patient, this could
include protected health information. If we combine this information with your protected
health information, we will treat all of that information as protected health
information and will only use or disclose that information as set forth in our notice of
privacy practices. You may opt-out of email communications at any time by clicking on
the unsubscribe link in the e-mail.
Feb. 28, 2024
General principles of poisoning. The Merck Manual Professional Version. https://www.merckmanuals.com/professional/injuries-poisoning/poisoning/general-principles-of-poisoning?qt=poisoning&alt=sh. Accessed March 3, 2022.
Poisons, chemicals and smoke inhalation. American College of Emergency Physicians. https://www.emergencyphysicians.org/article/know-when-to-go/poisoning. Accessed March 3, 2022.
What you can do. Health Resources and Services Administration. https://poisonhelp.hrsa.gov/what-you-can-do. Accessed March 3, 2022.
Kleinman K, et al., eds. Toxicology. In: Harriet Lane Handbook. 22nd ed. Elsevier; 2021. https://www.clinicalkey.com. Accessed March 7, 2022.
Swallowed a button battery? Battery in the nose or ear? National Capital Poison Center. https://www.poison.org/battery. Accessed March 3, 2022.
Ipecac: Don’t use it. National Capital Poison Center. https://www.poison.org/articles/ipecac-do-not-use-it. Accessed March 3, 2022.
Using skin patch medicines safely. National Capital Poison Center. https://www.poison.org/articles/using-skin-patch-medicines-safely. Accessed March 3, 2022.
Takahashi PY (expert opinion). Mayo Clinic. March 8, 2022.
.
>>> Read full article>>>
Copyright for syndicated content belongs to the linked Source : Mayo Clinic – http://www.mayoclinic.org/first-aid/first-aid-poisoning/basics/art-20056657