1987 Annual report of the American Association of Poison Control Centers National Data Collection System
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Long-Acting Anticoagulant Rodenticide (Superwarfarin) Poisoning: A Review of Its Historical Development, Epidemiology, and Clinical Management
2015, Transfusion Medicine ReviewsCitation Excerpt :The incidence of reported exposures peaked in 2002 with 17 100 reported exposures. Since 2002, each year has seen a steady decline in the number of reported cases (Fig 2) [23–48]. Most human LAAR exposures are unintentional childhood exposures [21].
Propranolol treatment in life-threatening airway hemangiomas: A case series and review of literature
2013, International Journal of Pediatric OtorhinolaryngologyFrequency and outcomes of accidental ingestion of tobacco products in young children
2011, Regulatory Toxicology and PharmacologyAre One or Two Dangerous? Calcium Channel Blocker Exposure in Toddlers
2007, Journal of Emergency MedicineCitation Excerpt :Further study on the use of multidose charcoal and whole bowel irrigation in the treatment of CCB overdose is needed. Intravenous fluids to counteract hypotension and intravenous calcium to compete at the channel receptors can be used to support the circulatory system (3,13,17,39–46). Use of atropine and transcutaneous pacing to support heart rate, epinephrine, and pressors to improve cardiac contractility and maintain vascular tone, heart-lung bypass, and extracorporeal membrane oxygenation to augment cardiac function, and glucagon to support cellular metabolism are indicated, although their therapeutic efficacy in the calcium channel blocker overdose patient is variable (3,17,39–41,46–49).
Systemic toxicity from skin exposures (or what happens when you do not decontaminate)
2007, Journal of Chemical Health and SafetyPediatric Toxicology
2007, Emergency Medicine Clinics of North AmericaCitation Excerpt :Box 1 lists some drugs and drug classes that most agree are dangerous in small amounts. Box 2 catalogs fatalities from single-agent ingestions in children 6 years and younger as reported by the AAPCC from 1983 to 2004 [1,3–23]. Many of the agents in Box 1 also are located in Box 2, further emphasizing the toxicity of these agents.