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Human & Experimental Toxicology
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Rectal Ulcer with Massive Haemorrhage due to Activated Charcoal Treatment in Oral Organophosphate Poisoning

Taro Mizutani

Department of Anaesthesiology, Institute of Clinical Medicine, University of Tsukuba

Hiroshi Naito

Department of Anaesthesiology, Institute of Clinical Medicine, University of Tsukuba

Noriyoshi Oohashi

The Department of Emergency Medicine, Tsukuba Medical Center Hospital, Tsukuba City, Ibaraki-Ken, 305,Japan

A 42-year-old woman who had ingested a large amount of fenitrothion emulsion was admitted and treated. Treatments consisted of mechanical ventilation, intravenous administration of atropine and pralidoxime and repeated injection of activated charcoal with magnesium sulphate via a nasogastric tube. The patient developed massive rectal bleeding just after she had passed several hard masses of charcoal on the 10th day. Surgical haemostasis of the rectal ulcer was needed to control the haemorrhage.

Human & Experimental Toxicology, Vol. 10, No. 5, 385-386 (1991)
DOI: 10.1177/096032719101000515


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