Whole blood exchange transfusion as a promising treatment of aluminium phosphide poisoning
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Oct 03, 2018
About this article
Published Online: Oct 03, 2018
Page range: 275 - 277
Received: Mar 01, 2018
Accepted: Sep 01, 2018
DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/aiht-2018-69-3129
Keywords
© 2018 Nasim Zamani, published by Sciendo
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 License.
A 37-year-old male was referred to us about one hour after deliberate ingestion of two 3-gram aluminium phosphide (ALP) tablets. Three hours after admission, his blood pressure dropped to 85/55 mmHg, his heart rate increased to 120 bpm, O2 saturation dropped to 82 %, and the electrocardiogram showed junctional rhythm. We started whole blood exchange, and gross haematuria and jaundice ensued. However, his blood pressure increased, arrhythmia resolved itself, and he was extubated two days after the transfusion was completed. He was sent home seven days after admission completely symptom-free. We believe this treatment may be successfully applied in ALP-poisoned patients.