Accidental Children Poisoning With Methadone: An Iranian Pediatric Sectional Study

JABBEHDARI, Sayena and FARNAGHI, Fariba and SHARIATMADARI, Fakhreddin and JAFARI, Narjes and -Fereshteh MEHREGAN, Fatemeh and KARIMZADEH, Parvaneh (2013) Accidental Children Poisoning With Methadone: An Iranian Pediatric Sectional Study. Iranian Journal of Child Neurology, 7 (4). pp. 32-34.

[thumbnail of 4773-Article Text (Word file)-17527-1-10-20131116.pdf] Text
4773-Article Text (Word file)-17527-1-10-20131116.pdf - Published Version

Download (317kB)

Abstract

How to Cite This Article: Jabbehdari S, Farnaghi F, Shariatmadari SF, Jafari J, Mehregan FF, Karimzadeh P. Accidental Children Poisoning With Methadone: An Iranian Pediatric Sectional Study. Iran J Child Neurol. 2013 Autumn;7(7): 32-34.

Objective

Toxic poisoning with methadone is common in children in Iran. Our study was carried out due to the changing pattern of methadone poisoning in recent years and increasing methadone toxicity.

Materials & Methods

In this descriptive-sectional study, all of the methadone poisoned children younger than 12 years who were admitted to the Loghman Hakim Hospital in 2012, were assessed. Clinical symptoms and signs, para-clinical findings, and treatment were evaluated.

Results

In this study, 16 boys and 15 girls who had been poisoned by methadone were enrolled. The mean age of patients was 55 months. All patients had been poisoned randomly or due to parent’s mistakes. The mean time of symptoms onset after methadone consumption was 1 hour and 30 Min, indicating a relatively long time after onset of symptoms.

Clinical findings were drowsiness (75%), miotic pupil (68 %), vomiting (61%), rapid shallow breathing (57%) and apnea (40%). In paraclinical tests, respiratory acidosis (69%) and leukocytosis (55.2%) were seen. The most important finding was increase in distance of QT in ECG (23.8%). The mean time of treatment with naloxone infusion was 51 hours. Three percent of patients had a return of symptoms after discontinuation of methadone. In patients with apnea, a longer course of treatment was required, and this difference was significant. Also, 17% of patients with apnea had aspiration pneumonia, which was statistically significant.

Conclusion

We suggest long time treatment with naloxone and considering the probability of return of symptoms after discontinuation of methadone.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Grantha Library > Medical Science
Depositing User: Unnamed user with email support@granthalibrary.com
Date Deposited: 08 Mar 2023 12:37
Last Modified: 19 Jul 2024 07:46
URI: http://asian.universityeprint.com/id/eprint/257

Actions (login required)

View Item
View Item